Tending Fire: Coping With America's Wildland Fires

ebook (EPUB via app)

50% off with code SPRING50

Sale Price:
$15.00
Price:
$30.00
ISBN:
Published:
Apr 9, 2013
2004
  • For sale only in the United States and Canada
  • Audio and ebooks (EPUB and PDF) purchased from this site must be accessed on the 快色直播 app. After purchasing, you will receive an email with instructions to access your purchase.
    About audio and ebooks
  • Request Exam Copy

The wildfires that spread across Southern California in the fall of 2003 were devastating in their scale-twenty-two deaths, thousands of homes destroyed and many more threatened, hundreds of thousands of acres burned. What had gone wrong? And why, after years of discussion of fire policy, are some of America’s most spectacular conflagrations arising now, and often not in a remote wilderness but close to large settlements?

That is the opening to a brilliant discussion of the politics of fire by one of the country’s most knowledgeable writers on the subject, Stephen J. Pyne. Once a fire fighter himself (for fifteen seasons, on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon) and now a professor at Arizona State University, Pyne gives us for the first time a book-length discussion of fire policy, of how we have come to this pass, and where we might go from here.

Tending Fire provides a remarkably broad, sometimes startling context for understanding fire. Pyne traces the 鈥渁ncient alliance鈥 between fire and humanity, delves into the role of European expansion and the creation of fire-prone public lands, and then explores the effects wrought by changing policies of 鈥渓etting burn鈥 and suppression. How, the author asks, can we better protect ourselves against the fires we don’t want, and better promote those we do?

Pyne calls for important reforms in wildfire management and makes a convincing plea for a more imaginative conception of fire, though always grounded in a vivid sense of fire’s reality. 鈥淎mid the shouting and roar, a central fact remains,鈥 he writes. 鈥淔ire isn’t listening. It doesn’t feel our pain. It doesn’t care-really, really doesn’t care. It understands a language of wind, drought, woods, grass, brush, and terrain, and it will ignore anything stated otherwise.鈥

We need to think about fire in more deeply biological ways and recognize ourselves as the fire creatures we are, Pyne argues. Even if, in recent times, 鈥渨e have gone from being keepers of the flame to custodians of the combustion chamber,鈥 tending fire wisely remains our responsibility as a species. 鈥淭he Earth’s fire scene,鈥 he writes of us, 鈥渋s largely the outcome of what this creature has done, and not done, and the species operates not according to strict evolutionary selection but in the realm of culture, which is to say, of choice and confusion.鈥

Rich in insight, wide-ranging in its subject, and clear-eyed in its proposals, Tending Fire is for anyone fascinated by fire, fire policy, or human culture.