Philip G. Terrie is a professor emeritus in American culture and environmental studies at Bowling Green State University. He is the author of Forever Wild: A Cultural History of Wilderness in the Adirondacks and Contested Terrain: A new History of Nature and People in the Adirondacks, Second Edition.
Description
"Conversational in tone, the book invites readers to wrestle with the same contradictions Terrie has long understood 'wilderness' to represent and to join him in the important work of making meaning of this unique, as so far uniquely protected, landscape." - Kevin Sheets, author of Sources of America's History "The close reading of the debates surrounding the legal construction of the Forest Preserve and the Adirondack Park are worthy additions to the established history. The details on the Protect! court case are intrinsic to the story of the Adirondacks. (Jonathan Anzalone, author of Battles of the North Country: Wilderness Politics) Terrie's inspiring Wild Forest Lands succinctly recounts the tumultuous events that culminated in New York's 1894 'Forever Wild' constitutional amendment that is the inspiration and envy of wilderness defenders the world over. It details the relentless efforts to open the Adirondack Wilderness to renewed industrial exploitation and introduces us to many of the heroic defenders of the Adirondack's re-wilding forests. The moral of this epic story: the price of wilderness is eternal vigilance." - Jamie Sayen, author of Children of the Northern Forest: Wild New England's History from Glaciers to Global Warming