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Environmental Conservation & Protection of Plants & Wildlife, Environmental Conservation & Protection of Habitats & Ecologies, U.S. Travel - National Parks & Historic Sites, Natural History - United States, Florida - Travel, Wetlands - Travel, Biodiversit
Stolen Water by W. Hodding Carter β€” book cover

Stolen Water

by W. Hodding Carter
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Overview

When the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan went into effect during the Clinton administration, Florida's great grassy wilderness garnered a host of national attention -- and has since become a breeding ground for environmental dispute. What does it take to "save" a forest? How can it be preserved?

Enter W. Hodding Carter. For an Outside magazine feature he's agreed to paddle the ninety-nine-mile waterway in Everglades National Park to examine the landscape from all angles -- physical, political, cultural, and very personal -- and get to the rock-bottom heart of the story. Stolen Water is the outgrowth of Carter's journey.

Through investigative research, eyewitness accounts, and interviews with key players in the conservation controversy, Carter offers a rare portrait of a national treasure. Utterly important, and at times downright hilarious, Stolen Water is a classic American adventure tale, and an environmental parable for our time.

Synopsis

When the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan went into effect during the Clinton administration, Florida's great grassy wilderness garnered a host of national attention -- and has since become a breeding ground for environmental dispute. What does it take to "save" a forest? How can it be preserved?

Enter W. Hodding Carter. For an Outside magazine feature he's agreed to paddle the ninety-nine-mile waterway in Everglades National Park to examine the landscape from all angles -- physical, political, cultural, and very personal -- and get to the rock-bottom heart of the story. Stolen Water is the outgrowth of Carter's journey.

Through investigative research, eyewitness accounts, and interviews with key players in the conservation controversy, Carter offers a rare portrait of a national treasure. Utterly important, and at times downright hilarious, Stolen Water is a classic American adventure tale, and an environmental parable for our time.

Publishers Weekly

When the author became the "adoptive father" of a Florida manatee named Brutus, he took his family to meet the 2,000-pound marine mammal at its home in the warm springs of the Everglades. As his interest in the species increased, it led to an overwhelming concern for the ecology and the future prospects of the Everglades in general. Carter (Westward Whoa), a gifted teller of nature tales with a flair for the humorous and offbeat, decided to tour this vast network of connecting rivers via canoe. The journey includes encounters with environmentalists, naturalists, sugar farmers, politicians and swamp folk. Of course the flora, fauna and natural history of this great river of grass is scrutinized in detail; whether describing the sadness of an early morning death watch over the corpse of a recently killed manatee or detailing the struggles of hiking and hacking through a mangrove thicket with insects and myriad swamp creatures (including cottonmouths and gators) crawling amid the muck, Carter manages to see the comedic light in all things including these downright murky situations. While the author's environmentalist credentials and interests are apparent from the beginning, he is no simplistic knee-jerk reformer blind to the multiplicity of competing factors that make ecological issues so pesky. As in all too many environmentally sensitive areas, the Everglades has suffered from both too little and too much public attention. In this engaging read, the author details some of the competing interests of developers and conservationists, which have made for a political jumble of mixed good and venal intentions leading to some successful and also poor results. Agent, Sally Wofford Girand. (July) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, W. Hodding Carter


W. Hodding Carter has written for several national magazines, including Esquire, Smithsonian, Newsweek, and Outside. The author of Westward Whoa, A Viking Voyage, and An Illustrated Viking Voyage, he lives with his family in Rockport, Maine.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

When the author became the "adoptive father" of a Florida manatee named Brutus, he took his family to meet the 2,000-pound marine mammal at its home in the warm springs of the Everglades. As his interest in the species increased, it led to an overwhelming concern for the ecology and the future prospects of the Everglades in general. Carter (Westward Whoa), a gifted teller of nature tales with a flair for the humorous and offbeat, decided to tour this vast network of connecting rivers via canoe. The journey includes encounters with environmentalists, naturalists, sugar farmers, politicians and swamp folk. Of course the flora, fauna and natural history of this great river of grass is scrutinized in detail; whether describing the sadness of an early morning death watch over the corpse of a recently killed manatee or detailing the struggles of hiking and hacking through a mangrove thicket with insects and myriad swamp creatures (including cottonmouths and gators) crawling amid the muck, Carter manages to see the comedic light in all things including these downright murky situations. While the author's environmentalist credentials and interests are apparent from the beginning, he is no simplistic knee-jerk reformer blind to the multiplicity of competing factors that make ecological issues so pesky. As in all too many environmentally sensitive areas, the Everglades has suffered from both too little and too much public attention. In this engaging read, the author details some of the competing interests of developers and conservationists, which have made for a political jumble of mixed good and venal intentions leading to some successful and also poor results. Agent, Sally Wofford Girand. (July) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Carter (Westward Whoa; A Viking Voyage) certainly thinks big when deciding on his book ideas. His latest journey begins with a search for his family's adopted manatee, Brutus, in Melbourne, FL, but it quickly turns into a mini-ecology lesson and a legislative accounting of the federal boondoggle known as the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. A correspondent for Outside magazine, Carter convinces his editor to back his 99-mile canoe trip through the river of grass to find out why the "Everglades is fast becoming the Neverglades." Readers will enjoy humorous references to Florida's colorful history with its cast of eccentric characters, including greedy railroad barons, incompetent businessmen, and visionless politicians. But trying to wade through a tediously detailed investigation of inept political decision making might be the equivalent of hacking a path through the many mangrove forests that continually impede his trip. To his credit, however, Carter invokes a genuine longing for a return to the once-pristine and -productive ecosystem after nothing but years of draining, dredging, damming, and dynamiting. Accompanied by a few photographs, this title could have included a map or two. Appropriate for natural history and travel collections in larger public libraries.-April Brazill, Southampton Coll. Lib., NY Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2005
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
288
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780743474078

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