Discover
Jan 1, 1945 — —· 81 yrs

Tom Horton

8
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FIVE CENTURIES AFTER VERRAZANO discovered Chesapeake Bay, four centuries after John Smith charted it, was it still possible to make a voyage of discovery here in Maryland, the nation's fifth most densely settled state?

— from The great marsh

Most acclaimed

#1

Turning the tide

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Noam Chomsky addresses relations throughout Central America and relates these to superpower conflicts and the overall impact of the Cold War on international relations. Turning the Tide succinctly and powerfully addresses three interrelated questions: What is the aim and impact of the U.S. Central American policy What factors in U.S. society support and oppose current policy? And how can concerned citizens affect future policy? Turning the Tide shows how U.S. Central American policies implement broader U.S. economic, military, and social aims even while describing their impact on the lives of people in Central America. A particularly revealing focus of Chomsky's argument is the world of U.S. academia and media, which Chomsky analyzes in detail to explain why the U.S. public is so misinformed about our government's policies. Whether the U.S. initiates a major invasion in Central America or instead continues to support reaction through the region by economic pressure, CIA intervention, and proxy military activity, many U.S. citizens will want to argue for a more humane policy. Chomsky provides the most compelling available analyses of what is going on, why, and what concerned citizens can do about it. -- ‡c From publisher’s description.

#2

Water's Way

2000

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#3

The great marsh

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"Is it still possible to make a voyage of discovery here in Maryland, the nation's fifth most densely settled state? In The Great Marsh: An Intimate Journey into a Chesapeake Wetland, David W. Harp's photography and Tom Horton's prose produce a portrait of one such journey in an intriguing and endangered habitat." "Into this remarkable territory - whose shrinking dimensions frighten every naturalist and ecologist - Harp and Horton embarked on a canoe trip, exploring, documenting, and photographing the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge in Dorchester County. This volume, at its core, is the story of a single crossing of the Blackwater's length, east to west, while the accompanying essays discuss how the marsh functions as a refuge for migrating butterflies, the wetlands sustain a lonely trapper, and the bogs yield archeological treasures - remnants of American Indian hunting forays and colonial boat building."--Jacket.

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