"I feel grateful for this illuminating and beautifully written book."
--John Elder, author, Reading the Mountains of Home
"What a fascinating book-it is equal parts Sherlock Holmes and Aldo Leopold"
--Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature
The Countryman Press Web Site, August, 2001
Summary
Landscape is much more than scenery to be observed or even terrain to be traveled, as this fascinating and many-layered
book vividly shows us. Etched into the land is the history of how we have inhabited it, the storms and fires that
have shaped it, and its response to these and other changes.
An intrepid sleuth and articulate tutor, Wessels teaches us to read a landscape the way we might solve a mystery.
What exactly is the meaning of all those stone walls in the middle of the forest? Why do beech and birch trees
have smooth bark when the bark of all other northern species is rough? How do you tell the age of a beaver pond
and determine if beavers still live there? Why are pine trees dominant in one patch of forest and maples in another?
What happened to the American chestnut? Turn to this book for the answers, and no walk in the woods will ever be
the same.