book data
248 ratings, 4.50 average rating, 51 reviews
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published
1998
(first published 2000)
by Farrar, Straus and Giroux
binding
Hardcover, 704 pages
literary awards
Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction (1999)
isbn
0374105200
(isbn13: 9780374105204)
description
In 1978 New Yorker magazine staff writer John McPhee set out making notes for an ambitious project: a geological history of North America, centered, f...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 432)
Read in July, 2008
recommended to X by:
Dr. Arecommends it for: geologists, professional and amateur
For pure enjoyment, I would really give this book 3 stars, but it merits 4 stars for the amount of research and information that is in it and for the wonderful writing style and occasional subtle humor. It is not a casual read, but for anyone interesting in geology is it worth the effort and somehow explains the principles of plate tectonics (and other things) without being overly technical. It also touches on the history of a few areas of the U.S., which at times got tedious, and the many "...more
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7 comments
bookshelves:
pulitzers
Read in March, 2007
This was my first foray into John McPhee's work. And a weighty foray it was : This hefty tome consists of four previously-published McPhee books assembled into one spine, augmented with a fifth chapter.
McPhee's often staccato prose takes the reader on a tour of the geology of the lower 48, as seen largely in the roadcuts of Interstate 80, separated into five major segments : the Appalachians, the Midwest, Wyoming, Nevada, and California. Although I found myself lacking an understanding...more
McPhee's often staccato prose takes the reader on a tour of the geology of the lower 48, as seen largely in the roadcuts of Interstate 80, separated into five major segments : the Appalachians, the Midwest, Wyoming, Nevada, and California. Although I found myself lacking an understanding...more
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non-fiction
So, this book is pretty big! It looks good on the shelf, cause it has like a Pulitzer award shiny doda on it. So, when people come over, they are like...."wow, Judy, you read some heavy good shit." And I'm like "Oh, I know, h'orderves anyone?"
However, this is not an easy book, so I think the judges may have been peer-pressured into voting for it. A short reenactment:
Judge 1 "Good sir, I declare this John McPhee chap, knows how to write jolly-good ...more
However, this is not an easy book, so I think the judges may have been peer-pressured into voting for it. A short reenactment:
Judge 1 "Good sir, I declare this John McPhee chap, knows how to write jolly-good ...more
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bookshelves:
environmental,
non-fiction
recommends it for:
environmental educators, folks interested in the land they live on
I've only read parts of this book, since there are many different books included in this version of his geologic exploration of a cross-section of the US. I have a few things to say. #1. Read Rising from the Plains as you're driving in the Tetons. #2. Read any other section as you're driving in the area described. Your road trip will become something entirely different if you can see what you're reading about. #3. Read these books when you're planning a trip to any of the areas discussed. ...more
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Read in December, 2009
This is an amazing book about geology, geologists, plate tectonics, America, and time. It is comprised of four books previously published: Basin and Range (which I reviewed before and still stand by the review), In Suspect Terrain, Rising from the Plains, and Assembling California. A final essay about the "basement" of North America is attached as a coda to finish the book. While reading the book, the sense of geologic time overwhelmed me and I couldn't help thinking how arbitrary and ...more
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Read in May, 2007
Absolutely, bar none, the finest work of American natural science that I've ever read. McPhee has the eye of a scientist and the soul of a poet, and it makes for truly astonishing writing. I don't like to pile on the superlatives, but this is probably one of my ten favorite books of all time.
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What a mind-blowingly comprehensive compilation of writing on a geologic cross section of America through characterizations of off-beat geniuses and possessed rock-hounds. Totally awesome. I was reading part of this while on a bus with students heading East on I-80 through Wyoming and was totally enraptured with the very interpretation through the book of the bleak landscape surrounding me. Who knew I was looking at billions of years in time with a mere 50 minute drive from point to point? T...more
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recommended to Ryan by:
the Pulitzer prize company
recommends it for: egomaniac stylists
recommends it for: egomaniac stylists
You know, I really liked portions of this book, especially the story of how we came to define geologic time. It really blew me away. And it's obvious that McPhee has poured his life into this book. However, he repeatedly went over my head with the layers upon layers of geologic terminology--and almost never stops to explain what he's talking about. There is no glossary either. So, what's the point of the book if I can't follow what the hell he's talking about? I guess he wants me to apprec...more
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Read in January, 2003
The geological history of the United States as seen along Interstate 80 (New York City to San Francisco) interwoven with the personal histories of the people who showed it to him.
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
people who think they hate geology
This book was recommended to me by a professor as a good example of science writing. I had never expressed any interest in geology- the whole Rocks for Jocks thing. The book itself is daunting, both in size and scope.
However, I found myself getting into it rapidly. I am not yet finished, but it's really fascinating. I do beading and have found many of the origins of my favorite gemstones.
His prose is basic and wonderfully descriptive at the same time. It was difficul...more
However, I found myself getting into it rapidly. I am not yet finished, but it's really fascinating. I do beading and have found many of the origins of my favorite gemstones.
His prose is basic and wonderfully descriptive at the same time. It was difficul...more
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For McPhee's prose style, structural control, and sense of nuance. Too, I'm compelled by the metaphorical implications of plate tectonics.
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Read in June, 2008
This was my first John McPhee book, and it was amazing. Following his wanderings across the country and through the subject of geology was an enjoyable way to spend a couple of weeks (this book is actually a collection of 4 of his previously published works). McPhee's ramblings (both physical and intellectual) have a meditative quality that completely captured my interest despite knowing next to nothing about rocks (though now I will definitely be able to hold my own the next time cocktail conve...more
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bookshelves:
geology,
non-fiction,
own
Read in August, 2008
Since I was just in Nevada, I thought I would re-read Basin & Range. Driving Highway 50 (what Nevada calls the "Loneliest Road") definitely gives you a great sense of the geology. McPhee, of course, travels I-80, but US 50 crosses similar territory.
Update: It was extremely helpful to have a picture of Nevada's landscape in my head while reading the book. Of course, in a lot of ways Basin & Range is an introduction to the field of geology. So, there ended up bei...more
Update: It was extremely helpful to have a picture of Nevada's landscape in my head while reading the book. Of course, in a lot of ways Basin & Range is an introduction to the field of geology. So, there ended up bei...more
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favorites,
non-fiction
Read in January, 2004
I LOVE this book! It's actually 4 or 5 books in one, covering 10 years of McPhee traveling across the US with various geologists - it's got geology, travelogue, biography, the history of geology, crazy stories from the old west, occasional tangents to Greece or ancient India ... the most excitement I would ever have expected out of geology. And yes, I do want to be McPhee when I grow up.
My only caveat? Not enough pictures! Read it with a big topographical map nearby. Or, while f...more
My only caveat? Not enough pictures! Read it with a big topographical map nearby. Or, while f...more
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Read in December, 2005
I have not finished this book. I take it in little bits here and there, and will likely continue to do so throughout my life. It is a masterpiece of geologic natural history. I do not recommend it as your first John McPhee. Most of his books are more accessible than this one.
But this book in monumental in scope and content. There is so much here between the geology itself to the characters of geology that McPhee meets during his journey in a west to east transect of North America thr...more
But this book in monumental in scope and content. There is so much here between the geology itself to the characters of geology that McPhee meets during his journey in a west to east transect of North America thr...more
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Read in June, 2007
I forgot that I read this book earlier in the summer, while vacationing in Jackson Hole. I liked it, really made the geology of the place come alive. Really helps you get outside your anthropocentric head, think big-scale, not worry so much that humans are turning the planet to shit. The earth is strong, and will survive us. It will be hear, full of life, billions of years after we're gone. I do confess that I found parts of this book repetitive, but I enjoyed the Wyoming and California sections...more
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Read in March, 2007
A little out of date, but the only book to tackle the topic at an easy and interesting read. I used the audio version for several of the sections, but had the paper copy handy to look at the graphics, of which there could have been more. I'd like to see someone's update, and also to find the same slightly-more-than-layman read on other areas, such as the Brevard Zone in the southeast US. Someone should also come up with an annotated version as a travel guide, with lat/long of the points of in...more
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recommends it for:
highwaymen
McPhee makes sentences that turn on you at the last second and deliver a sudden, polite fillip to the sinuses--twists like the punch to a joke--likening cars in a mudslide to raisins in uncooked dough, for example, or defining words backwards, or inserting sentimental lyricism into a sentence about sedimentary rock.
If you read quickly, it's like getting a Swedish massage from the inside.
If you read quickly, it's like getting a Swedish massage from the inside.
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Read in January, 2003
If you've ever made the I-80 woad twip across the States, soaked up the macro view outside the window of the changing landscape, and wondered how it all got that way, you'll thrill at McPhee's work. Interwoven with the human stories that affect or are impacted by the landscape. One quick hit -- the top of Everest was once underwater... If your reaction is "HUH?!!?", then pick up the book.
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This book is dense -- you have to really love rocks to be able to get into it -- but it's good. I'm learning a lot. McPhee is a great writer and is so good and giving the reader a clear way to see what he's writing about. What I mean by this is that after reading a few chapters of this book when I look out across the landscape I see rocks and rock formations in a different way.
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