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 Location:  Home » Wildlife Conservation » Nature & Wildlife » Last Stand: America's Virgin Lands  
Last Stand: America's Virgin Lands
Last Stand: America's Virgin Lands
Author: Barbara Kingsolver
Creator: Annie Griffiths Belt
Publisher: National Geographic
Category: Book

List Price: $40.00
Buy Used: $0.82
You Save: $39.18 (98%)



New (30) Collectible (3) from $8.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 396067

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.3
Dimensions (in): 12.1 x 10.3 x 0.9

ISBN: 0792269098
Dewey Decimal Number: 333.95160973
EAN: 9780792269090
ASIN: 0792269098

Publication Date: October 1, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Last Stand: America's Virgin Lands

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
ACCLAIMED AUTHOR BARBARA KINGSOLVER brings her passion for the wilderness to bear in this striking book. Trained as a biologist, Kingsolver writes authoritatively, and movingly, about the continent's virgin pockets of desert, coast, grassland, forest, and wetland. ONE-OF-A-KIND IMAGES: Specially commissioned infrared photographs, taken and hand-tinted by Belt, create a painterly portrait of wild landscapes that gives this an art book appeal. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EXPERTISE: Readers look to the Geographic as a leading expert in the geography and ecology of America. America's virgin lands are not always where you'd expect to find them - in national parks or other preserves. They're scattered in often small, sometimes barely known pockets across the continent. These are the remnants that remind us of what wildness once meant - and what will be lost if it disappears. In her moving introduction and in the essays that open each chapter, Kingsolver discusses the ways of wilderness, the threats against it, its natural imperatives and what it needs to survive in the different forms featured in the chapters - as grassland, wetland, dryland, coast, and woodland. Annie Griffiths Belt's evocative colour and hand-tinted photographs capture the essence of these diverse bioregions. The images take you from the tallgrass prairies of Kansas and Nevada to the Arctic tundra of Alaska, from the endangered coral reefs off the Florida Keys to the Pacific-pounded coast of Oregon, from the deserts of the Southwest to the sky-piercing redwoods of California.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Brilliant, brilliant, the only word BRILLIANT   March 17, 2005
 12 out of 12 found this review helpful

I have had the pleasure of reading every Barbara Kingsolver book printed. I have shared them all with the one's I love. This book, Last Stand, is the last one of Kinsolver's works that I purchased. It is the most magnificent coffee table style book I have ever seen.

I loved the photos,the artwork,the amazingness of the American wilderness and the commentary attached to each section.

I am an Australian, living in Australia. If Barbara Kingsolver could only describe our historic landscape in such a beautiful way. We have vast tracts of open spaces equally beautiful but never portrayed in such a wonderful way,for the world to see.

Reading this book,looking at the pictures, actually bought tears to my eyes. Following on from Prodigal Summer,and Poisonwood Bible, as I have done, this lady touches one's soul. I have read a few reviews, some liked this,some didn't like that. Well I loved the whole glorious thing.

This book is a bargain at $1000, so if you can buy it for 40 dollars,it is way beyond a bargain,it is a priceless gem. it will be the best $40 you can ever spend.

I have shared this with so many people and all are in total awe.(maybe we Australians see the world differently to you Yanks).

Again I say BRILLIANT, Barbara Kingsolver and Annie Griffiths Belt have earned their place in Heaven with this magnificent, worldly creation. Congratulations to both of them for a magnificent job,truly done well.

I presented a copy of this book to the love of my life. I wrote inside the front cover. "Dear Rosy, we have enjoyed so many great Kingsolver books. This one is truly spectacular, I hope you enjoy it,Enjoy,Enjoy, love Andrew" and I hope that if you purchase it, you too will derive the same immense pleasure that I have.

Andrew Alstin. Hamilton Victoria Australia



5 out of 5 stars The photo images reminded me of the great impressionists   April 25, 2004
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

When you open up National Geographic's coffee table photo album entitled LAST STAND: AMERICA'S VIRGIN ISLANDS you immediately are aware of very unusual photographic techniques. A fast glance to the back of the book succinctly explains:
"The photographs appearing in this book represent two types of work. Roughly half were shot on color transparency film. The rest were shot on black-and-white infrared negative film and the prints then hand-colored by photographer Annie Griffiths Belt. The borders were specially created by designer Jen Christiansen. Captions for photographs were deliberately kept vague as to location to discourage visitation to these fragile natural sights."

With this above information firmly implanted in my brain I slowly re-inspected the brilliant photo images and concurred with the creators of this book that it is best not to advertise the locations of these intensely poetic photographic masterpieces.

You may ask why? The reply is simply that many of these photo images tell a story of America's Virgin Lands, their wildlife and habitats which at all costs need to be preserved. It is in fact the "Last Stand" and the photos serve as a strong invitation to contemplate the earth, trees, seasons and oceans and what it would mean if we continue to destroy these marvels of nature.

The book is a compilation of highly sensitive images illustrating the infinite mysterious faces of nature. Moreover, we are exposed to the fine sense of observation and perfect technical skills of Annie Griffiths Belt's photography.
Flipping through the pages of this photo album we invariably can't help but admire the richness of the foliage of the live oaks of South Carolina, the haunting Georgia Barrier Island, the whisper of the winds in the trees of Northern Florida, and the mystique of the North Cascades Forest of Northern Washington. These and many more infinite faces of nature are displayed within the five sections of the book that are divided as follows: wetlands, woodlands, coasts, grasslands and dry lands. Each section reaffirms the delicate power of Belt's photography and inspires us to share her emotions.

After savouring the photos illustrated in this book, I would have to concede that I felt there was a kind of impressionistic quality attached to these images that reminded me of the masterpieces of such great artists such as Degas, Monet, and Pissaro.

Norm Goldman Editor of Bookpleasures.com


4 out of 5 stars beautiful color photograpy   February 12, 2004
 8 out of 11 found this review helpful

"Last Stand" is primarily a collection of nature photography with chapter introductions written by Barbara Kingsolver. This is an environmental work in that the aim of the book is to educate about some of the beautiful regions of our country and to tell that there is a significant human threat to the environment. Kingsolver writes passionately about how the human settlement and human wastefulness is cause further destruction of the environment. The photography in this book is broken up not into regions of the country, but types of ecological regions: wetlands, forest areas, etc.

The photography by Annie Griffith Belt is absolutely beautiful. There are two types of photography. The first type is black and white infrared photography that has been hand colored. These pictures look like paintings, and while pretty, I was not as interested in these pictures. The photographs that I found to be stunning were the simple color pictures. We get to see beautiful landscapes that would make a very nice postcard. These are images that make a strong case that these are places we need to preserve.

I should state that I do not know anything about photography, so I cannot speak for the craft of taking pictures and how well the photographs come out as technical pieces. I just enjoyed the photography.

My suggestion is that one should look at this book for the beautiful photography and not for Kingsolver's section introductions. However, if someone is interested in reading that these are beautiful places that are being ruined by a human cause, by all means, read the text in this book. Barbara Kingsolver is a wonderful writer, but when she has a cause and is writing non-fiction, she is not nearly as interesting as she is in her fiction. This book is worth looking at for the color photography.

Wildlife, nature and the Environment

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