In the Blast Zone: Catastrophe and Renewal on Mount St. Helens
 |
Edited by Charles Goodrich, Kathleen Dean Moore, and Frederick J. Swanson
2008. 5-1/2 x 8-1/2 inches. 128 pages. Map. Line drawings. Bibliography.
ISBN 978-0-87071-198-5. Paperback, $15.95.
Visit The Spring Creek Project website.
|
As it erupted in 1980, Mount St. Helens captured the attention of the region, nation, and world, and it continues to fascinate us today?a constant reminder that we live in volcano country. In lucid prose and poetry by some of America?s leading writers and scientists,
In the Blast Zone explores this story of destruction and renewal in all its human, geological, and ecological dimensions.
Most popular accounts of the momentous eruption have focused on the devastation it caused. More recent scientific work on Mount St. Helens tells a story of unexpectedly rapid and varied ecological and geological change.
In the Blast Zone is the first book to present a cross-pollination of literary and scientific perspectives on the mountain's history of cataclysm and renewal.
Most of the contributors to this volume camped together on Mount St. Helens for four days, hiking, observing, and sharing ideas. They asked the question: What can this radically altered landscape tell us about nature and how to live our lives?
In the Blast Zone collects some of their answers. While introducing ecological and geological insights, it also tells compelling stories about how science and literature inform our lives and our relationship to nature. These writings will startle readers with new recognition of the matchless gifts of Mount St. Helens: the gifts of beauty, of illumination, of hope.
"One comes away from reading this book with a powerfully transformed view of Mount St. Helens and volcanoes in general, carrying in one's imagination ideas of green moss and blue butterflies, birdsong and wind, ideas that have now begun to complicate the image of St. Helens as a stark post-eruption moonscape. . . . This is an extremely hopeful work, one that suggests the fundamental durability of nature."
--Scott Slovic (from the Foreword)
The Contributors
Gary Braasch, John Calderazzo, Christine Colasurdo, Charlie Crisafulli, John Daniel, Jerry Franklin, Charles Goodrich, Robin Kimmerer, Ursula K. LeGuin, Tim McNulty, Kathleen Dean Moore, Nalini Nadkarni, Robert Michael Pyle, Scott Russell Sanders, James Sedell, Gary Snyder, Kim Stafford, Frederick J. Swanson, Tony Vogt, Ann Zwinger, Susan Zwinger
About the Editors
Charles Goodrich is Program Director of the Spring Creek Project for Ideas, Nature, and the Written Word at Oregon State University and the author of
The Practice of Home: Biography of a House.
Kathleen Dean Moore is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at OSU, where she directs the Spring Creek Project and serves as the university?s first Writer Laureate. She is the author of several books, most recently
The Pine Island Paradox: Finding Connection in a Disconnected World.
Frederick J. Swanson is a Research Geologist with the USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, in Corvallis, Oregon. He is co-editor of
Ecological Responses to the 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens and has spent his career working on interactions of geological and ecological forces in mountain lands.
Back to top of page
Secure online ordering form (Orders go to our distributor - The University of Arizona Press). For a complete listing of available books, check out our catalog of books in print.