book data
234 ratings, 4.21 average rating, 16 reviews
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published
January 1967
by Books on Tape
binding
Audio Cassette
isbn
5557081836
(isbn13: 9785557081832)
description
Contrary to popular opinion, the whole of New Jersey is not a continuous Superfund site enlivened solely by poorly labeled Turnpike exits and skanky d...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 312)
Read in December, 2008
I recently read a review of a new Carolyn Chute book...she's sort of the literary equivalent of an outsider artist - think Basquiat, except a militant, reclusive woman who's big on the second ammendment.
I tried to read one of her books, but as oppose to visual arts, the idea of trudging through the book of an untrained writer can be daunting; and though there are autobiographical aspects, they are mostly fiction.
But I want to read them, and I want to love them: the backwoods towns of New...more
I tried to read one of her books, but as oppose to visual arts, the idea of trudging through the book of an untrained writer can be daunting; and though there are autobiographical aspects, they are mostly fiction.
But I want to read them, and I want to love them: the backwoods towns of New...more
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I want McPhee's essays about the pine barrens to be true today. Growing up there, but not necessarily being a piney, I suppose I represent a type of person McPhee could not have been writing about in the 60s. But for a nostos I don't entirely have access to, this book does it for me in every way. & since a you can still get lost, temporarily, in the pine barrens or (like I did) become accidentally submerged in a cranberry bog, his writing is relevant enough.
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bookshelves:
journalism,
mines,
travel
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
Pineys, Jerseyans, sons of the soil, history buffs
McPhee explores the landscape & the history of the Pines in an easy-going, if sometimes utilitarian, style. the meandering tone matches the way he seems to wend his way through the woods, stopping at any time or place that has a relevant story to tell. i don't know how it took me so long to find this book, but i'm glad i finally did. for one who grew up & lived on the edge of the Pines for many years, this book is absolutely fascinating. the picture it paints of the Pines, though dated 1...more
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bookshelves:
nature,
nonfiction,
places
People ask me whether this book is realistic. I grew up in the Pine Barrens (also euphemistically called the Pinelands) and attest: It is absolutely realistic. When I read this book, I reconnect with that conflicted relationship with home - the place you come from, not the the place you want to be. The Pine Barrens and their Pineys are timeless, and lost, and not eager to be found. It's a wild, quiet place of tar paper, sugar sand, and the pine-needle scent I always forget I'm missing. I'm...more
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Read this recently, very interesting book about the Pines, the Pineys, and the fragility of the ecosystem and the billions of gallons of clear, clean water that flows in the Aquifer beneath the sands.
Read it!
PMZ
Read it!
PMZ
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Read in November, 2007
I always enjoy John McPhee books, but there is so much information in them, it always takes me a long time to finish any of them. Loads of great information and generally about a topic I know absolutely nothing about.
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bookshelves:
a_more_whole_you
New Jersey! Who knew?
You'll never look at the state the same way again, although the indelible blight that is the 95 corridor will forever remain.
You'll never look at the state the same way again, although the indelible blight that is the 95 corridor will forever remain.
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What can I say? I actually made a trip to NJ after reading this just to see the Pine Barrens up close and personal.
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A must for New Jersians and naturalists... a unique and endangered ecosystem
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bookshelves:
nonfiction,
travel
That there is much to N.J. that I would love to explore!
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Read in April, 2006
recommends it for:
naturalists
I never even knew that New Jersey had trees, let alone a forest!
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bookshelves:
book-club,
literature
recommended to Kari by:
Chris Feudtner
I read this with my book club, and liked it a lot.
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to-read
(on 57 people's shelves)
nonfiction (on 11 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 10 people's shelves)
non-fiction (on 7 people's shelves)
history (on 4 people's shelves)
nature (on 3 people's shelves)
travel (on 3 people's shelves)
new-jersey (on 2 people's shelves)
journalism (on 2 people's shelves)
american-history (on 1 person's shelf)
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nonfiction (on 11 people's shelves)
currently-reading (on 10 people's shelves)
non-fiction (on 7 people's shelves)
history (on 4 people's shelves)
nature (on 3 people's shelves)
travel (on 3 people's shelves)
new-jersey (on 2 people's shelves)
journalism (on 2 people's shelves)
american-history (on 1 person's shelf)
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