Can the love reserved for family and friends be extended to a place?
In her latest book, acclaimed author Kathleen Dean Moore reflects on how
deeply the environment is entrenched in the human spirit, despite the
notion that nature and humans are somehow separate.
Moore's essays, deeply felt and often funny, make connections in what
can appear to be a disconnected world. Written in parable form, her
stories of family and friends--of wilderness excursions with her husband
and children, camping trips with students, blowing up a dam, her
daughter's arrest for protesting the war in Iraq--affirm an impulse of
caring that belies the abstract division of humans from nature, of the
sacred from the mundane.
Underlying these wonderfully engaging stories is the author's belief in
a new ecological ethic of care, one that expands the idea of community
to include the environment, and embraces the land as family.