Dan Chapman is a writer, reporter, and lover of the outdoors. He grew up in Washington DC and Tokyo, the son of a newspaperman and an English teacher. He worked for Congressional Quarterly, The Winston-Salem Journal, The Charlotte Observer, and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He has also reported from Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. He currently writes stories about conservation in the South for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Description
Introduction: Ghosts, Skeeters, and Rye Savannah, Georgia-Muir spent a half-dozen hungry and desperate, yet historically important, nights in the city's famed Bonaventure Cemetery. A latter-day visit to the land of the dead underscores the South's peril, and its promise. Chapter 1: Who Is John Muir? Atlanta, Georgia-A brief biography of the botanist, inventor, rambler, writer, cofounder of the Sierra Club, father of the national park system, and conscience of the environmental movement. Chapter 2: A New South Reckoning Louisville, Kentucky-Muir crosses the Ohio River and into history. The land of bourbon, horses, and highways epitomizes the South's sprawling environmental problems. Chapter 3: The South's Incredible Biodiversity Is Threatened and Endangered Cave City, Kentucky-Mammoth Cave National Park, and the Green River, are filled with natural wonders. Some species are disappearing. Some are already gone. And some are making a comeback. Chapter 4 A Celebration of Muir Turns Toxic Kingston, Tennessee-The annual Muir Fest is overshadowed by the nation's worst coal ash disaster and the South's checkered legacy of cheap energy. Chapter 5: "The Mountains are Calling"-and They're Not Happy Coker Creek, Tennessee-The saga of the southern Appalachians as they succumb to the very forces that make them popular - with deadly consequences. Chapter 6: More Rain, More Heat, and More Trouble Boone, North Carolina-A warming world forces trees, trout, and rare flowers higher up into the mountains. Climate change hits the hills in unpredictable and alarming ways. Chapter 7: Water Wars Suches, Georgia-Georgia, Alabama, and Florida have been fighting for a generation over the Chattahoochee River. Farmers, oystermen, kayakers, and sturgeon are threatened by the loss of this increasingly precious natural resource. Chapter 8: The Deeper the River, the Greater the Pain Augusta, Georgia-Globalization demands a deeper Savannah River and compounds the environmental damage done previously by dams, developers, cities, farmers, and factories. Chapter 9: A Coastal Playground Is Disappearing Tybee Island, Georgia-Rising seas. Ghost forests. Sunny-day flooding. Salty tap water. Bigger hurricanes. There's not enough money to save the coast from a warming world. Chapter 10: Where Hogs Rule and Turtles Tremble Ossabaw Island, Georgia-Invasive species-wild boar, Burmese pythons, tegu lizards, lionfish, northern snakeheads, melaleuca trees, laurel wilt-march relentlessly across the South. A marksman aims to save at least one endangered species. Chapter 11: Take My Water, Please High Springs, Florida-The aquifer running from Savannah to Miami is under siege from overuse, pollution, and saltwater intrusion. Yet Florida all but gives away billions of gallons a year to private profiteers. Chapter 12: The End of the Road Cedar Key, Florida-Development imperils one of Florida's last wild places. Science, though, offers hope for the future. Acknowledgments Further Readings About the Author

