book data
68 ratings, 4.01 average rating, 5 reviews
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published
April 1st 1997
by Farrar, Straus and Giroux
binding
Hardcover, 216 pages
isbn
0374177260
(isbn13: 9780374177263)
description
Master essayist John McPhee heard about vehicles in Nevada that resemble police cars, but the cop inside was actually a "brand inspector," a...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 91)
Read in January, 2000
Al Lehman In a land where a common saying is that no one eats his own beef, the Nevada brand inspector becomes crucial to civilization. Without one, There'd be a lot of dead bodies." Rustling in the 1990's is still an occupational hazard where ranches are measured in tens of thousands of acres. John McPhee, a favorite writer of mine, has recently published a new collection of essays entitled, Irons in the Fire. The title essay is his investigation of brands and their history. The brand in...more
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Collection of Nonfiction pieces- including one on brand inspecting in Nevada (cattle brands)- rocks and forensic geology- and Plymouth Rock. McPhee is obviously heavy into geology. I had to glaze over the sections where he got technical about the rocks. It was a foreign language to me. This was a nice collection. I've read a couple other things of McPhee's in other collections- and I remember being BORED to DEATH. This wasn't like that. He made it interesting enough where the highly techn...more
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Read in July, 2007
excellent essays. largely forensic geology, solving murders using clues like where the sand on the body came from, etc. an crazy section on the japanese practice during WWII of sending hydrogen balloon with fire bombs blindly across the pacific to randomly destroy places in the US -- we caught them by pinpointing the type of sand to a particular spot in japan, and bombing that! brilliantly researched and engagingly spun.
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bookshelves:
essays,
non-fiction
Read in August, 1999
recommends it for:
Environmentalists and Jerseyans
I read this book for my AP English Composition class as a study on essay writing. It was delightful. John McPhee writes about science and the environment the way most fiction authors write about love affairs and dreams.
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Just another absolutely great collection of essays from McPhee. Whenever we drive up the 5 freeway we think about the tires. And when I hike in the desert, I think about cattle rustlers.
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3 comments
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