Larry Hughes is a scientist, artist, and writer based in Memphis, Tennessee. His 45-year geophysics career has focused on mining and environmental investigations, resulting in numerous publications and top awards for scientific innovation. An award-winning watercolor artist, he has been selected as Artist in Residence at multiple national parks, where he advocates for resource preservation through plein-air trail engagement and painting classes for children. In his spare time, he cooks up a mean plate of chile rellenos.
Description
“Hughes’s warm knitting together of a “patchwork of personalities” makes for satisfying reading. It’s an upbeat tale of American innovation and can-do-ism.”
— Publishers Weekly
In Rings of Fire, Larry Hughes takes us on a picaresque journey, recounting the urgent effort to turn calcite crystals into the antiaircraft gunsights that helped win World War II. Along the way, he introduces a motley but quintessentially American cast of characters: a genius inventor and his cadre of Ivy League scientists in Boston; an eccentric artist and a Cahuilla shaman in the California deserts; a card-shark cowboy and “Crystal Crackin’ Mamas” in Montana; ex-cons and immigrants, drifters and hot-headed miners, even an optometrist who fancied himself a secret agent in Mexico.
It’s an epic story, filled with an unfolding array of evocatively described landscapes and sharply drawn, unforgettable people.
— Dayton Duncan, writer and producer for Ken Burns documentary films and author of fourteen books on American history and national parks