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Botanical Companions: A Memoir of Plants and Place (American Land & Life)

✍ Scribed by Frieda E. Knobloch, Wayne Franklin


Publisher
University Of Iowa Press
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Leaves
199
Series
American Land & Life
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The trunk of this book is the unlikely marriage of two botanists, one in his 70s and the wife in her 30s. This raises the question of what binds people together. The answer is plants. Aven Nelson was one of the most distinguished botanists of the American West, doing major exploring at the end of the 19th century when the romantic Humboldtian natural history explorer tradition was still alive. But the relationship of Aven and Ruth is only the starting point for a book of ruminations on questions of larger bindings, most importantly what binds people to a place or to the Earth as a whole. The Nelsons were on the fringe of the academic world, but they had a much richer natural realm than the botanists headquartered in botanical capitals like Columbia University in New York City. Aven Nelson expressed his priorities as "the lives of men and women shall be fuller and richer because they have touched hands as it were wih a few of the lovable creations and creatures of the great uiverse." The author, Frieda Knobloch, a westerner herself, interweaves the Nelson's story with her own experiences and reflections on what binds her to the Nelsons and to the land. This book portrays science as very much an affair of the heart, of people obsessed with things they love, of imperfect people and institutions, but finally as something that has crucial things to teach the human race about living on Earth. The form of the book is very unusual, blending sections of letters, journals, biographical links, theory, and personal meditations. It's all great food for the imagination.

✦ Table of Contents


Contents......Page 8
Foreword by Wayne Franklin......Page 10
Preface and Acknowledgments......Page 16
Work in Place......Page 30
Specimens......Page 54
Album......Page 88
Letters......Page 100
Habeas Corpus......Page 118
Collecting......Page 146
Red Desert Reprise......Page 172
Notes......Page 174
Bibliography......Page 192


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