“Lovely . . . punctuated with illustrations from Herring’s sketchbooks, which she carried on her many forest journeys. The book is passionate, at times poetic, in which natural history, art, and care for the natural environment converge elegantly.”—National Outdoor Book Awards<br /><br />“Accessible and engaging.”—Bryony Cottam, <i>Geographical</i><br /><br />2025 National Outdoor Book Awards (NOBA) winner, Natural History Literature category<br /><br />2025 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title <br /><br />Finalist, Oregon Book Award in the General Nonfiction category, 2026<br /><br />“<i>Born of Fire and Rain</i> is filled with deeply researched scientific stories about the adaptations and intricacies at work in ancient forests. Beautifully written and illustrated, inviting, and up-to-the-minute, this wonderful and remarkable book is a rewarding and enjoyable read. It will appeal especially to readers who liked <i>Braiding Sweetgrass</i> or <i>Finding the Mother Tree</i>.”—Kathleen Dean Moore, author of <i>Earth’s Wild Music</i><br /><br />“The Douglas-fir forests of the Pacific Northwest region of North America are nearly without rival in the world, and their distinctions have rarely been fully appreciated. M. L. Herring beautifully captures their story.”—Jerry F. Franklin, University of Washington College of the Environment<br /><br />“This is a passionate and extremely readable tribute to the Pacific Northwest forests, giving readers a true sense of the importance, ecology, and special sanctuary of these trees.”—Meg Lowman, author of <i>The Arbornaut</i><br /><br />“This thrilling book, charged with awe, compassion, humility, and wonder, takes us on an unforgettable journey among ancient giants and unstable terrain. In the face of environmental disaster, M. L. Herring offers real hope for a shared future springing from new ways of seeing, imagining, and understanding our astonishing planet.”—Fiona Stafford, author of <i>The Long, Long Life of Trees</i><br /><br />“M. L. Herring weaves together strands of science and nature writing, local history, and memoir to create a contemplative, deeply researched, and sensory-rich portrait of the Pacific temperate rain forest.”—James Barilla, author of <i>My Backyard Jungle</i><br /><br />

Go beyond the scenery of the Pacific temperate rainforest to witness how complex ecosystems survive in a world of upheavals

Winner, National Outdoor Book Award • Finalist, Oregon Book Award • CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title

If you live on a rapidly changing planet, you’d be wise to learn how it works. The giant old forests on a skinny stretch of land on the far west coast of North America have a lot to say about living in a twitchy world.

In this engaging book science writer M. L. Herring takes readers into the Pacific temperate rainforest at the tumultuous edge of a shifting continent in a precarious moment of time. Readers peek behind the magnificent scenery into a forest of ancient trees, exploding mountains, disappearing owls, tsunamis, megafires, and ten million people to learn what it means to be a forest in a world of upheavals.

Through Herring’s words and pictures, readers drift into the canopy through masses of ferns and lichens, burrow into soil through hair-thin threads of fungi, and plunge headlong through a watershed flushed with rain and snowmelt. Readers experience the temperate rainforest through science and art as it faces a shifting climate and the shifting priorities of a constantly changing society. The book journeys beyond the grid of latitude and longitude and into places only one’s imagination can fit, to discover what it means to be human in an ecological world.

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Go beyond the scenery of the Pacific temperate rainforest to witness how complex ecosystems survive in a world of upheavals

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780300275421
Publisert
2025-01-07
Utgiver
Yale University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
280

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

M. L. Herring is associate professor emerita of science communication at Oregon State University, where she continues to lead workshops to inspire people to experience the world through observation, art, and ecology. She lives in Corvallis, OR.