How the Canyon Became Grand: A Short History

by Stephen J. Pyne

Paperback, 1999

Status

Available

Call number

979.1

Publication

Penguin Books (1999), Edition: Reprint, 199 pages

Description

"Dismissed by the first Spanish explorers as worthless, the Grand Canyon was nearly doomed to be forgotten, an incidental landform. Luckily, as Stephen Pyne explores in this book, in the next four hundred years we learned to see - and also to make maps, to understand geology and measure the earth's history, to embrace nature rather than shun it. A complex coalescence of science, art, literature, nationalism, and personalities allowed us to create a cultural canyon as deep and resonant as the physical one."--BOOK JACKET. "How the Canyon Became Grand is both a chronicle of discovery, recounting the achievements of explorers, geologists, artists, and writers, from John Wesley Powell and Clarence Dutton to Wallace Stegner, and a provocative explanation of how they turned the Canyon into a symbol of American grandeur, and later of wilderness - in other words, how they transformed an almost overlooked phenomenon into a fixture of the American identity."--BOOK JACKET.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member untraveller
My third attempt at the book ended as did the first two. Pyne is a very, very dull writer. The concept sounds neat, I enjoy intellectual history, but this is beyond bad. Among other criticisms, his similes are atrocious.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

199 p.; 5.01 inches

ISBN

0140280561 / 9780140280562
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