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Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World

David Epstein, Will Damron, et al.

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster

Jon Krakauer , Randy Rackliff, et al.

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story of the Dyatlov Pass Incident (Historical Nonfiction Bestseller, True Story Book of Survival)

Donnie Eichar

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Mushrooming without Fear: The Beginner's Guide to Collecting Safe and Delicious Mushrooms

Alexander Schwab

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Art of Learning: An Inner Journey to Optimal Performance

Josh Waitzkin and Tim Ferriss

4.4 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Fourth Edition

John Rousmaniere and Mark Smith

4.8 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Secret Life of Plants: A Fascinating Account of the Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Relations Between Plants and Man

Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Ashley Book of Knots

Clifford W. Ashley

4.8 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The Talent Code: Greatness Isn't Born. It's Grown. Here's How.

Daniel Coyle, John Farrell, et al.

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Shadow Divers: The True Adventure of Two Americans Who Risked Everything to Solve One of the Last Mysteries of World War II

Robert Kurson

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

Black Box Thinking: The Surprising Truth About Success

Matthew Syed

4.6 on Amazon

1 HN comments

A Sense of Where You Are

John McPhee

4.4 on Amazon

1 HN comments

The National Parks: America's Best Idea

Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns

4.7 on Amazon

1 HN comments

String Theory: David Foster Wallace on Tennis: A Library of America Special Publication

David Foster Wallace and John Jeremiah Sullivan

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

You Are Your Own Gym: The Bible of Bodyweight Exercises

Mark Lauren and Joshua Clark

4.5 on Amazon

1 HN comments

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hyperrailonMar 31, 2021

Many histories of American national parks have stressed the tension between parks as preserves and parks as places for enjoyment. This is so even for park histories that might be expected to follow an orthodox view, such as the Ken Burns PBS miniseries "National Parks: America's Best Idea."

Among those discussions, what's interesting to me is that Stephen Mather [1], the first director of the National Park Service and before that a de facto lobbyist within the Wilson administration for national parks, saw little tension between promoting park tourism and better preserving parks from abuse. In fact, his consistent position was that making parks more fun and accessible for ordinary people would in fact lead to more parks and better-protected parks, because awed park visitors would themselves become lobbyists for parks. He actually broke with his friend and former employee Robert Sterling Yard (the ex-PR man for parks mentioned in this piece) precisely on this point - Yard didn't believe that more park visitors were the unalloyed good that Mather was sure they were.

On balance, I do think that Mather was more right than Yard. But for at least about 50 years there has been a realization that the downsides of park tourism are far bigger than Mather would have envisioned.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Mather

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