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Saving Arcadia
Saving Arcadia: A Story of Conservation and Community in the Great Lakes | Heather Shumaker
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Saving Arcadia: A Story of Conservation and Community in the Great Lakes is a suspenseful and intimate land conservation adventure story set in the Great Lakes heartland. The story spans more than forty years, following the fate of a magnificent sand dune on Lake Michigan and the people who care about it. Author and narrator Heather Shumaker shares the remarkable untold stories behind protecting land and creating new nature preserves. Written in a compelling narrative style, the book is intended in part as a case study for landscape-level conservation and documents the challenges of integrating economic livelihoods into conservation and what it really means to preserve land over time. This is the story of a small band of determined townspeople and how far they went to save beloved land and endangered species from the grip of a powerful corporation. Saving Arcadia is a narrative with roots as deep as the trees the community is trying to save; something set in motion before the author was even born. And yet, Shumaker gives a human face to the changing nature of land conservation in the twenty-first century. Throughout this chronicle we meet people like Elaine, a nineteen-year-old farm wife; Dori, a lakeside innkeeper; and Glen, the director of the local land trust. Together with hundreds of others they cross cultural barriers and learn to help one another in an effort to win back the six-thousand-acre landscape taken over by Consumers Power that is now facing grave devastation. The result is a triumph of community that includes working farms, local businesses, summer visitors, year-round residents, and a network of land stewards. A work of creative nonfiction, Saving Arcadia is the adventurous tale of everyday people fighting to reclaim the land that has been in their family for generations. It explores ideas about nature and community, and anyone from scholars of ecology and conservation biology to readers of naturalist writing can gain from Arcadias story.
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July TBR. I have to read at least 125 pages a day to complete them all. Eeep!

KellyHunsakerReads You have some excellent books here! 6y
Daisey ❤️ East of Eden! 6y
arubabookwoman I loved both A World for Julius and The Kindly Ones. They are very, very different. Hope you aren‘t too turned off by some of the awful things, which are graphically described, that happen in The Kindly Ones. And after reading Julius I often wondered why the author wasn‘t as well-known as his compatriot Llosa. 6y
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arubabookwoman Oh—and I am reading (or rather rereading) East of Eden this month, and liking it v. much. It‘s for my years of my life read—it was published in 1952 where I currently am. I‘m about 300 pp in- looks like I have the same edition you have pictured. 6y
BarbaraBB You have not read East of Eden yet?? Lucky you! 6y
Liz_M @arubabookwoman @BarbaraBB is also a reread for me and just as wonderful as I remembered! 6y
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