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A Sand County
Almanac
by Aldo Leopold
“There are some who
can live without wild things, and some who cannot.
These essays
are the delights and dilemmas of one who cannot.” -
Aldo Leopold
Admired by an ever-growing number of readers
and imitated by hundreds of writers, A Sand
County Almanac written
by Aldo Leopold serves as one of the cornerstones for modern conservation
science, policy, and ethics. First published by Oxford University
Press in 1949 – one
year after Leopold’s death – it has become a classic
in the field equaled in its lasting stature only by Henry David
Thoreau’s
Walden.
While Aldo Leopold was writing in the 1940’s
he could not have imagined the far-reaching impact his book would
have. Over two million copies have been printed and it has been
translated into nine languages.
Long respected in his own fields of forestry and wildlife management,
Aldo Leopold was a prolific writer for scientific journals and
conservation magazines. However, in 1937, sometime after his fifty-third
birthday, Leopold became increasingly focused on reaching the general
public with his conservation message. Working over a twelve-year
period, Leopold wrote, re-wrote, and re-wrote again, essays that
both informed people of how the natural world worked, and inspired
people to take action to ensure the future health of the land and
water that sustains all life.
Not only was this influential book late
to develop in Leopold’s
mind, it was very nearly never completed. A week after Oxford University
Press agreed to publish his manuscript, titled “Great Possessions,” Aldo
Leopold suffered a heart attack and died while fighting an escaped
grass fire on a neighbor’s property.
Lead by Luna Leopold, Aldo’s son, a group of Leopold’s
family and colleagues collaborated on the final editing of the
book, reluctantly agreeing to one significant change; renaming
the book from Leopold’s working title “Great Possessions” to
A Sand County Almanac and Sketches Here and
There.
Through science, history, humor, and prose, Leopold utilizes A
Sand County Almanac and its call for a Land Ethic to communicate
the true connection between people and the natural world, with
the hope that the readers will begin to treat the land with the
love and respect it deserves.
Download printable A Sand
County Almanac Fact Sheet (2-page pdf file)
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