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Paperback Mountains of the Heart: A Natural History of the Appalachians Book

ISBN: 1938486889

ISBN13: 9781938486883

Mountains of the Heart: A Natural History of the Appalachians

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Book Overview

Part natural history, part poetry, Mountains of the Heart is full of hidden gems and less traveled parts of the Appalachian Mountains

Stretching almost unbroken from Alabama to Belle Isle, Newfoundland, the Appalachians are one of the oldest mountain ranges in the world. In Mountains of the Heart, renowned author and avid naturalist Scott Weidensaul shows how geology, ecology, climate, evolution, and 500 million years...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

In Our Backyard

I have lived in the shadows of the Appalachians my entire life but have never really taken a close look at it. I was looking for a volume that would serve as an introduction to the Appalachians, its natural history, and how the ecology of the mountains and its human inhabitants have coexisted. This book was a perfect addition to my library. Through a lifetime of research and experience, Weidensaul is able to describe the complexity of this ecosystem. His writing is touching but can be a bit overly poetic at times. I am looking forward to some of his other books.

A Masterpiece of Appalachian Natural History

This collection of beautifully-crafted essays should be required reading in all Appalachian Studies classes. When readers tell me that they enjoy the natural history references in my Ballad novels, I urge them to read Scott Weidensaul. This wonderful book traces the natural history of the Appalachian Mountains all the way from Alabama to New Brunswick, Canada. In clear and lyrical prose, Weidensaul describes the formation of the mountain chain, touching on plate tectonics and the configuration of the prehistoric continents. Several chapters describe the plants and animals past and present which make for the unique ecosystem that is Appalachia: the use of the mountains as a migration path for birds and monarch butterflies; the 20th century chestnut blight which destroyed a species of tree, and the extermination of the passenger pigeon. With a keen understanding of nature and an obvious love of the land, Scott Weidensaul writes a guide to the mountains that is both informative and enchanting.

A lesson in natural history, ecology, and connectedness

If someone assigned you the task of writing a history of the Appalachian Mountains, how would you organize it? Keep the information in its separate realms of geology, botany, zoology, and anthropology? Start in Alabama and work northward? Go state by state, province by province, and look at the smaller specific mountain ranges? Well, Scott Weidensaul has taken none of those approaches, thank goodness. His is an education by general themes: basic geology (for it must start there), bird migrations, habitat specialization, forestry, mammalian zoology, archaeology, pollination, extinction, survival. Each chapter has a pure focus; and yet all of the chapters somehow touch on all of these topics. Weidensaul's conversational style has the reader walking through the woods with him, chatting seemingly aimlessly, all the time seeing and learning about the life that abounds. Gems of detail sneak up on us while we read. If you travel 1000 feet up, the habitat and ecosystems change as if you had traveled 100 miles north. Wow. And then there are the interspecies connections, some well-known and some new to us: squirrels and oaks, oaks and gypsy moths, migratory birds and fatty fruits, white pines and ship masts, bears and wetlands, fishers and porcupines, crossbills and spruces. The natural world makes sense after reading this book. Highly recommended for naturalists everywhere and mandatory reading for residents of the Appalachian states and provinces.

Captured Our Hearts

Our family squabbled over who was reading next when we borrowed the hardcover edition from the local library. We each became completely immersed in these mountains as Scott's vivid and descriptive writing drew us in. For the casual outdoors person who wants to learn more about the flora and fauna along the trail; for the naturalist who reads and nods in agreement with the text; for who appreciates the natural history of this region; this is the book to add to the top of the reading list. And you might want to buy two copies! Leave one at home. Put the second in the backpack for field notes.
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