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In Print

Peter Matthiessen '50
The Birds of Heaven: Travels with Cranes
North Point Press/Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, $27.50

In 1937, pioneer conservationist Aldo Leopold '09MF noticed with alarm the rapidly dwindling populations of an elegant, long-legged bird known as the sandhill crane, and in an essay called “Marshland Elegy,” Leopold explained why saving cranes was an ecological and moral imperative. “When we hear his call we hear no mere bird,” he wrote. “He is the symbol of our untamable past, of that incredible sweep of millennia which underlies and conditions the daily affairs of birds and men.”

Natural history writer, conservationist, and novelist Peter Matthi-essen takes up where Leopold left off, and Matthiessen’s latest (his 19th work of nonfiction, along with nine novels) is a progress report on the gauntlet thrown down 65 years ago. In The Birds of Heaven—the title comes from the crane’s ability to fly so high (up to three miles) that it disappears from view—the writer visits representatives of the world’s 15 crane species, discusses their ecology and conservation status, and profiles a legion of biologists bent on protecting the bird.

Most prominent among them is George W. Archibald, the self-described “craniac” who in 1973 founded the International Crane Foundation in Wisconsin and has since pioneered captive breeding efforts to save the birds and to preserve their habitat. Matthiessen accompanies Archibald and others on research treks to such places as the Daurian Steppes of Mongolia, Hokkaido Island in Japan, the outback of northern Australia, the Transvaal in Africa, and the sandhills of Wisconsin (cranes are found on every continent save South America and Antarctica), and his accounts of these travels and the cranes’s prospects can be depressing or uplifting, but always memorable.

“Soon the legions come straight in, many thousands at a time, filling the river dusk with yelps and beating wings,” Matthiessen writes of sandhill cranes returning to a wetland near the Platte River in Nebraska. “They drink from the silver glitter of the braid as evening deer step out from the night willow and move in peaceful silhouette among them.”

Matthiessen’s eloquent writing, along with Robert Bateman’s exquisite paintings of cranes that illustrate the book, makes this a deeply satisfying read—and a conservationist’s call to arms. “If man wants the last wild land and life to illuminate his world, he will have to pay dearly to undo his damage, and he must,” says Matthiessen.

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Elizabeth Barlow Rogers '64MCP
Landscape Design: A Cultural and Architectural History
Harry N. Abrams, $75

On campus this month, thousands of flowers and trees, including some of the original plantings of famous designer Beatrix Farrand, are beginning to come to life. And whether the observer is simply contemplating the potential in a package of seeds or viewing the splendor of one of the world’s great gardens, it’s clear that the human-shaped landscape has had a profound impact on us.

In a book that is encyclopedic in scope and gorgeous to peruse, art historian and city planner Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, founding president of the Central Park Conservancy, explores landscape design as “a relationship between people and place, a partnership between art and nature, and, increasingly, between art, nature, and technology.” Rogers begins her comprehensive tour with a consideration of ancient structures, from Stonehenge in England to the Serpent Mound in Ohio, that represented “cosmological landscape design—the shaping of the earth and the erection of monuments to reflect a cosmic paradigm.” The author then examines how, as technology and philosophy helped cut our complete dependence on nature, ideas about landscape design shifted over time and ultimately helped to restore some of those deep-seated ties to the natural world.

There is something for every interest in this magnificent volume: the garden as a “vision of paradise,” the landscape ideals of the Renaissance, the grandeur of Versailles, “intimations of immortality” in Chinese gardens, and the pastoral visions of Thomas Jefferson, to name but a few of the topics Rogers covers. In addition, she profiles the masters of the craft, from the 14th-century Turkish leader Tamerlane, who built legendary gardens at his palace in Samarkand, to the aptly named “Capability” Brown-the 18th-century English “professional improver”—the 19th-century creators of public parks in America, Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, and modern landscape sculptors, Yale graduate Maya Lin among them. Along the way, the author also considers the landscapes of suburbia, shopping malls, Disney’s “Magic Kingdom,” Colonial Williamsburg, and modern recreations of old-fashioned towns.

“It is important to realize that the making and erasure of place are continuous processes,” says Rogers. Landscape designers may attempt to rework the natural world into something permanent, but their very medium, as well as the way humans view the land, is always changing, “as long as there are hands, assisted by machines, to shape space in partnership with nature.”

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Phyllis Y. Harris '91MPH
From the Soul: Stories of Great Black Parents and the Lives They Gave Us
G.P. Putnam’s Sons, $24.95

“There is no more maligned institution in America than the black family,” says writer Phyllis Y. Harris. But though their stories rarely make the front pages or the evening news, there are plenty of black families in a variety of economic circumstances that rate as solid successes.

In this touching book—a “thank-you card” that “black parents deserve to see in print”—Harris presents ten successful black men and women who relate their upbringings as examples of “great black parenting” and discuss how the family values they absorbed contributed to their successes. The tales are all highly personal, ranging across the geographic and life history map—an architect who was raised in exile from her birthplace in apartheid South Africa; a doctor who grew up in the Jim Crow South; a senior officer and West Point professor whose father’s military career carried the family around the world, to name a few. Segregation and bigotry are in the picture, but the portraits are studies of parents teaching their children the skills necessary to overcome adversity rather than tales of being overcome by problems.

For this reason, Harris’s often poignant collection of memories has universal appeal. “Great parenting transcends racial and ethnic divisions,” she says, “because the standards of all parenting are the same: Did it help the child grow into an adult with the ability and desire to reach his or her potential? Is the child happy with the human being he or she has become?”

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L. Perry Curtis Jr. '53
Jack the Ripper and the London Press
Yale University Press, $35

Today, it is difficult to appreciate the full impact that five murders of lowlife prostitutes had on London in 1888. The loss of a sense of security helped fuel the uproar, but the dramatic surge in newspaper sales had more to do with the erotic subtext of the crimes. In Jack the Ripper and the London Press, Perry Curtis, a cultural historian at Brown, conducts a multilayered analysis of how the Victorian London press dealt with these literally unspeakable deeds. His findings touch on wide-ranging themes—social conditions, labor relations, the Irish question, and anti-Semitism, among them—and offer “a window on Victorian society.”

A journalist covering this ground might have lingered longer on the horrendous deeds themselves, the mutilations and removal of organs, the self-confessed perpetrator’s blood-stained letter and postcard to authorities, and the fruitless police work. But Curtis deals more in bibliography than gore; he entertains an astonishing range of methodologies while honoring feminist and other current critiques of the killer, the legal system, and the press alike.

Above all, Curtis knows his London newspapers and the culture that produced them. Curtis delves into the ownership, political orientation, commercial success, and general tone of 15 different dailies and weeklies that seem to have gotten England’s tabloid press off to a hair-raising start. Journalists, he shows, took great liberties with fact while they pushed ever harder against the frontiers of taste and censorship. This critique forms part of Curtis’s portrait of an era. His evocation of the dark, deprived, bustling East End of London will appeal to admirers of Dickens and other Victorian writers.

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Brief Reviews

Elizabeth Ballantine '71, ‘82MSL, ‘86PhD, and Stephen Lash '62
A Vision of Paradise: Robertson Ward and the Mill Reef Club
Derrydale Press, $50

The Mill Reef Club in Antigua has been the idyll of many Yale men, among them Dean Acheson, Paul Mellon, and Archibald MacLeish. This history includes recipes for rum punch.

Wickham Boyle '81MBA
A Mother’s Essays from Ground Zero
Phoenix Books, $20

On September 11, freelance writer and community activist “Wicki” Boyle bore witness to horror several blocks from her “safe, calm, sweet TriBeCa home” in New York. Her moving essays are a diary of the following days.

Susan B. Matheson, the Molly and Walter Bareiss Curator of Ancient Art
Art for Yale: A History of the Yale University Art Gallery
Yale University Art Gallery, $30

In a book that is both beautiful and fascinating, art historian Matheson presents a tale that begins in 1718 and continues to unfold.

Dorothy Roberts '77
Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare
Basic Civitas Books, $27.50

In an indictment of the child welfare system, Roberts, a law professor at Northwestern, maintains that the disproportionately large number of black children in foster care is a manifestation of racial injustice that punishes parents rather than tackles poverty’s social roots.

David Strohmaier '95MAR
The Seasons of Fire: Reflections on Fire in the West
University of Nevada Press, $21.95

Wildland firefighter, naturalist, and philosopher Strohmaier presents a personal view of battling blazes and trying to understand the role fire plays in shaping the natural and human world.

Joseph Weisberg '87
10th Grade
Random House, $23.95

In a modern version of the coming-of-age tale, Holden Caulfield meets Jack Kerouac in the body of an irrepressible tenth-grader named Jeremiah Reskin. The result is a funny, unflinching, and rarely grammatical look at sophomore year.

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More Books by Yale Authors

Bruce Ackerman 1967LLB, Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science, and Ian Ayres 1981, William K. Townsend Professor of Law
Voting With Dollars: A New Paradigm for Campaign Finance
Yale University Press, $29.95

Tami Davis Biddle 1995PhD
Rhetoric and Reality in Air Warfare: The Evolution of British and American Ideas about Strategic Bombing, 1914-1945
Princeton University Press, $45

Meiling Chang 1990MFA, 1993DFA
In Other Los Angeleses: Multicentric Performance Art
University of California Press, $60

Robert A. Dahl 1940PhD, Sterling Professor Emeritus of Political Science
How Democratic Is the American Constitution?
Yale University Press, $19.95

Benjamin R. Doolittle 1991BS, 1994MDiv, 1997MD
The Grundilini, from the Chronicles of Audelae
New Canaan Publishing Company, $12.95

Norman Etherington 1963, 1971PhD
The Great Treks: The Transformation of South Africa, 1815-1854
Longman Publishing, $16.95

Peter X Feng 1988, Editor
Screening Asian Americans
Rutgers University Press, $60

Thomas S. Greenspon 1963
Freeing Our Families from Perfectionism
Free Spirit Publishing, $14.95

Elizabeth Hartmann 1974
The Truth About Fire
Carroll and Graf, $24

Martha Hollander 1980
An Entrance for the Eyes: Space and Meaning in 17th-Century Dutch Art
University of California Press, $55

Stephen R. Kellert 1971PhD, Tweedy Ordway Professor of Social Ecology, and Timothy J. Farnham, Editors
The Good in Nature and Humanity: Connecting Science, Religion, and Spirituality with the Natural World
Island Press, $28

Richard Lingeman 1959Law
Sinclair Lewis: Rebel from Main Street
Random House, $35

Michael Lobel 1999PhD
Image Duplicator: Roy Lichtenstein and the Emergence of Pop Art
Yale University Press, $45

Richard Meyer 1988
Outlaw Representation: Censorship and Homosexuality in 20th-Century American Art
Oxford University Press, $35

James E. Mooney, Editor
Eighteenth-Century Catalogues of the Yale College Library
University Press of New England, $25

Mark E. Neely Jr. 1966, 1973PhD
The Union Divided: Party Conflict in the Civil War North
Harvard University Press, $24.95

Jules David Prown, Paul Mellon Professor Emeritus of the History of Art
Art As Evidence: Writings on Art and Material Culture
Yale University Press, $45

Stanton E. Samenow 1963
In the Best Interests of the Child: How to Protect Your Child from the Pain of Divorce
Crown Publishing, $24

Stephen Sandy 1955
Surface Impressions: A Poem
Louisiana State University Press, $27.95

Michael Satlow 1986
Jewish Marriage in Antiquity
Princeton University Press, $55

Robert J. Sternberg 1972, IBM Professor of Psychology and Education, Editor
Why Smart People Can Be So Stupid
Yale University Press, $29.95

Eugene S. Stevens 1960
Green Plastics: An Introduction to the New Science of Biodegradable Plastics
Princeton University Press, $29.95

Roger D. Stone 1955 and Claudia D'Andrea
Tropical Forests and the Human Spirit: Journeys to the Brink of Hope
University of California Press, $50

Carol Weston 1978
Melanie Martin Goes Dutch: The Private Diary of My Almost Bummer Summer with Cecily, Matt the Brat, and Vincent van Go Go Go
Alfred A. Knopf, $15.95

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