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Emerald City
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About the Author

Matthew Klingle is associate professor of history and environmental studies, Bowdoin College.

Reviews

"Emerald City has been eagerly awaited by historians of cities, the environment, and the North American West. Klingle addresses many of the traditional topics of urban history and reframes them as environmental questions."-Carl Abbott, Portland State University -- Carl Abbott "This book shifts the debate, mapping out new terrain that other historians will spend years exploring. Emerald City is one of the most thoughtful books published in recent years."-Jeremi Suri, University of Wisconsin, Madison -- Jeremi Suri "Seattle is not only among the loveliest of cities, it's also, as Matthew Klingle demonstrates here, one of the most interesting. Not everything in this history will please the boosters, but those who love the great city of the Northwest will find here a new sense of both the city's roots and its possibilities."-Bill McKibben, author of Deep Economy -- Bill McKibben "Matthew Klingle's Emerald City tells the story of how the entangled histories of nature and politics in Seattle shaped that city. It is a cautionary tale of private greed and public miscalculation, of good intentions gone awry and some things that came out right. Emerald City is the kind of history that every city needs, and all can learn from it. The story is particular to Seattle, but similar dramas can be read in the landscape of every American city. Required reading for everyone concerned with the future of Seattle, I recommend it for those engaged with city building anywhere."-Anne Whiston Spirn, author of The Granite Garden -- Anne Whiston Spirn "People and salmon can both prosper if we humans pay attention to the impact of our aspirations on the fish. Matt Klingle's exhaustive history of Seattle and its salmon reminds us, painfully at times, of the consequences to nature of our mindless pursuit of human well being."-William D. Ruckelshaus, Chairman, The Puget Sound Partnership and former Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency -- William D. Ruckelshaus "Matthew Klingle is among the new generation of urban environmental historians who truly understand the need to turn aside the superficial and unnecessary gulf between culture and nature to better understand urban development. The perspective of Seattle as a latter day 'Emerald City' from L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is masterful imagery and a pertinent departure point for reconsidering how cities evolve over time." -Martin V. Melosi, author of The Sanitary City -- Martin V. Melosi "A triumph... Klingle knows Seattle backward and forward; he also knows American cities in general, so this is not a strictly local story... A marvelous book and one, moreover, that should be essential reading for concerned Seattleites and environmental historians alike."-Richard Walker, Annals of the Association of American Geographers -- Richard Walker Annals of the Association of American Geographers "Emerald City successfully weaves urban history and environmental history into a narrative that shows how much we are a part of nature and nature is a part of us."-John Putnam, Project Muse -- John Putnam Project Muse

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