Pure Pleasure
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Writing East to West, McPhee released "In Suspect Terrain" when Plate Tectonic theory was still somewhat speculative. "Rising From the Plain', in which he owes a great debt (which he acknowleges) to David Love's mother's journal brings us to the Rockies, and is perhaps his most beautiful book. "Basin and Range" is entertaining, and goes well with "Beyond The 100th Meridian" or "Desert Solitare". "Assembling California" is my sedimental favorite, since I live in California and my friend Richard and I once followed a freshly bought copy down to Mussel Rock off the coast of Colma/South San Francisco. And you have to get this collection to get the 5th book, the name of which isn't, for some reason, yet burned into my memory. Maybe I've only read it 3 or 4 times.
I *have* probably read this entire collection, from to back, in this form, 3 or 4 times, not to mention reading the first four as they were published in The New Yorker (in slightly different form...) AND as separate books.
I give this book as a present. I treasure my copy, and own a second to loan out.
I quote from this book. ("If I had to sum up all of geology in once sentence, that sentence would be, "The summet of Mount Everest is marine limestone"".)
The only thing I can't say that's good about it as that its a bit too abstract, or something, for my 10 year old. I've tried it as bedtime reading a couple of times and he isn't having any of it. James Herriot, Gerald Durrell, J. K. Rowling, J. R. R. Tolkien, Arthur Conan Doyle, etc, he loves, but McPhee's subect, and delivery, is just one notch too dry, I suspect. I love this book. I knew very little about Geology when I started reading, but I've learned a lot from this book, and learned to enjoy the subject so that I can read other books by other writers as well.