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Ben  Goldfarb

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Ben Goldfarb

Goodreads Author


Member Since
February 2018


Average rating: 4.34 · 9,172 ratings · 1,624 reviews · 2 distinct worksSimilar authors
Eager: The Surprising, Secr...

4.28 avg rating — 5,434 ratings — published 2018 — 7 editions
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Crossings: How Road Ecology...

4.43 avg rating — 3,738 ratings — published 2023 — 8 editions
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The Nick Adams Stories by Ernest Hemingway
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What a Fish Knows by Jonathan Balcombe
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Draft No. 4 by John McPhee
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So much to love in this book, but I especially appreciated JM's advice on dealing with editors: "There are people who superimpose their own patterns on the work of writers and seem to think it is their role to force things in the direction they would ...more
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A Fever in the Heartland by Timothy Egan
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Chasing Giants by Zeb Hogan
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Fishing Through the Apocalypse by Matthew L. Miller
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The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan
The Backyard Bird Chronicles
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Quotes by Ben Goldfarb  (?)
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“Beavers, the animal that doubles as an ecosystem, are ecological and hydrological Swiss Army knives, capable, in the right circumstances, of tackling just about any landscape-scale problem you might confront. Trying to mitigate floods or improve water quality? There’s a beaver for that. Hoping to capture more water for agriculture in the face of climate change? Add a beaver. Concerned about sedimentation, salmon populations, wildfire? Take two families of beaver and check back in a year. If that all sounds hyperbolic to you, well, I’m going to spend this book trying to change your mind.”
Ben Goldfarb, Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter

“Beaver Pledge: One river, underground, irreplaceable, with habitat and wetlands for all.”
Ben Goldfarb

“That story, of course, isn’t unique to California, or to beavers. Europeans began despoiling North American ecosystems the moment they set boots on the stony shore of the New World. You’re probably familiar with most of the colonists’ original environmental sins: They wielded an ax against every tree, lowered a net to catch every fish, turned livestock onto every pasture, churned the prairie to dust. In California’s Sierra Nevada, nineteenth-century gold miners displaced so much sediment that the sludge could have filled the Panama Canal eight times.14 We are not accustomed to discussing the fur trade in the same breath as those earth-changing industries, but perhaps we should. The disappearance of beavers dried up wetlands and meadows, hastened erosion, altered the course of countless streams, and imperiled water-loving fish, fowl, and amphibians—an aquatic Dust Bowl. Centuries before the Glen Canyon Dam plugged up the Colorado and the Cuyahoga burst into flame, fur trappers were razing stream ecosystems. “[Beavers’] systematic and widespread removal,” wrote Sharon Brown and Suzanne Fouty in 2011, “represents the first large-scale Euro-American alteration of watersheds.”
Ben Goldfarb, Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter

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