| Bring Back the Buffalo!
A Sustainable Future for America’s Great Plains
Ernest Callenback, University of California Press, 1996
There are now over 200,000 buffalo in isolated pockets in the
country, from islands in the Great Salt Lake, to celebrity ranches.
This book presents a reasoned argument for the continued reintroduction
of this unique American animal, which once had a population of
sixty million roaming the plains. By the author of Ecotopia.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude: A Biography
Burt Chernow, St. Martin's Press, 2001
The official, authorized biography of the landscape wrapping couple,
starting with an image of Christo’s great grandfather, and
ending with a description of their daily routine at their home/studio/gallery
on Howard Street in New York City, where they listen to Mozart-
exclusively- everyday.
Death, Daring, and Disaster: Search and
Rescue in the National Parks
Charles “Butch” Farabee, Jr., Roberts Rinehart Publishers,
2001
Nearly 400 accounts, often brief, of the at times incredible,
strange, absurd, and tragic situations that are bound to come
up in a National Park system, where extreme geography meets millions
of visitors, looking for fun.
Designs on the Land: Exploring America
from the Air
Alex S. MacLean, Thames & Hudson, 2003
More than just eye candy, Alex MacLean (who also did Taking Measures
Across the American Landscape, with James Corner) has created
an incredible inventory of forms by flying continuously it seems,
at low altitude, taking photos of everything. Patterns emerge
from his avalanche of images of the landscape. Included is an
interview with him by Gilles Tiberghien, author of the monumental
book Land Art. Available
for sale in the CLUI Shop
Encyclopedia of American Prisons
Edited by Marilyn D. McShane and Frank P. Williams III,
Garland Publishing, 1996
This five hundred page, alphabetically ordered overview of incarceration
in the United States provides a concise and inclusive picture
of prison issues, in a manner that is clear and accessible to
the non-professional.
Great Projects: The Epic Story of the
Building of America, from the Taming of the Mississippi to the
Invention of the Internet
James Tobin, Free Press, 2001
The eight projects featured in this book have been described at
great length before, but this well illustrated book does a good
job of linking these projects, and collecting images and graphics
in one volume. Included are the flood-control works of the Mississippi
and Colorado Rivers, Edison’s lighting system and the spread
of electricity across the nation, the Croton Aqueduct, Boston’s
Big Dig, and the Internet.
Available
for sale in the CLUI Shop
Gone: Photographs of Abandonment on the
High Plains
Steve Fitch, University of New Mexico Press, 2003
Gorgeous photographs (especially the classrooms) of decayed interiors
of abandoned homes and schools (primarily), showing floors encrusted
in pigeon poop, rotten carpets, fallen drop ceilings, collapsed
plaster, and other touches of home.
Great White Fathers: The
Story of the Obsessive Quest to Create Mt. Rushmore
John Taliaferro, PublicAffairs, 2002
It’s hard to think very much about Mount Rushmore, as it
is so - monolithic. But when you do, it becomes more than simply
astounding. It helps to ensure that fact will nearly always trump
fiction. This book is a simply told story of the man behind the
faces, the sculptor and Great Man himself, Gutzon Borglum, and
how he was able to convince people to help him carve four giant
presidential heads out of living rock.
Ideal Cities: Utopianism and
the (Un)Built Environment
Ruth Eaton, Thames and Hudson, 2001
It seems there is an infinite number of ways to slice this subject,
and this new big book presents another POV, with some nice images
of historic precedents, from colonial times to the Renaissance,
as well as the more contemporary notions of Archigram, SITE, and
Superstudio.
In Advance of the Landing:
Folk Concepts of Outer Space
Douglas Curran, Abbeville Press, 2001
This 1985 classic was updated and expanded in 2001, and remains
a unique member of a now crowded field of campy, folksy, ufological
cultural research and documentation books, and among the most
sympathetic of the genre (though there is always room for more
- sympathy, that is).
Parting the Desert: The Creation
of the Suez Canal
Zachary Karabell, Knopf, 2003
A compelling account of the construction of one of the most dramatic
terrestrial engineering projects ever, which had the added dimension
of being as much of a monumental geopolitical construction, a
symbolic as well as a physical portal between Orient and Occident,
Europe and the Middle East.
Reclaiming the American West
Alan Berger, Princeton Architectural Press, 2003
A fantastic examination and portrayal of mining landscapes in
the American West, especially the numerous aerial photographs
that show the relationship between pit and spoil, and the more
subtle contours of reclaimed sites.
Available
for sale in the CLUI Shop
Robert Smithson: Learning from New Jersey
and Elsewhere
Ann Reynolds, MIT Press, 2003
Great addition to the Library of Smithson, as indicated by the
last two sentences of the book: “Smithson was an archivist,
and his work remains part of his archive. The relationship between
the two, - the work and the archive - though not strictly parallel,
consists of ‘reflections reflecting reflections.’”
Amen.
The Secret Architecture of
our Nation’s Capitol
David Ovason, HarperCollins, 2000
Looks at the influence of Masonic principles and practices on
the planning of Washington DC, and at the Masonic symbolism of
some of its architectural ornament and sculpture. At times fascinating,
the book dwells especially on astrologic symbols and patterns.
The Stadium: The Architecture
of Mass Sport
Edited by Michael Provoost, NAI Publishers, 2000
The catalog of this exhibit, shown at the Netherlands Architecture
Institute, stands alone as an interesting survey of the history
and current form of this often truly bizarre, singular, yet complex
type of structure.
Written on the Land
Mark Ruwedel, Presentation House Gallery, 2002
The catalog of a traveling exhibit, traversing Canada over the
next two years, of the photographs of Mark Ruwedel, seasoned explorer
and documentor of the incidental inscriptions on the western American
landscape.
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