In Mountains of Memory, seasoned wilderness dweller Don Scheese charts a long season of watching for and fighting fires in the largest federal wilderness area in the mainland United States. In the tradition of Edward Abbey and Gary Snyder, Scheese offers readers a meditation on the meaning and value of wilderness at the beginning of the twenty-first century, painting a complex portrait of the natural, institutional, and historical forces that have shaped the great forested landscapes of the American West.
A great examination of wilderness and the human relationship to it. Also serves as a great introduction to classic nature writers like Snyder and Thoreau--has a really nice bibliography. Scheese's sections on the history of Idaho are really interesting, and I learned a lot about wildfire fighting.
I graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College in 1980 with a degree in Geography. Don Scheese later taught there in the Geography and English departments and I know I would have had him as a professor had I been 10-15 years younger. I appreciate that I was able to get a sense of what he might have been like as a teacher through this book, though it is not at all about teaching. In it he brings out a summer working as a fire lookout on Ruffneck Peak in the Frank Church Wilderness of Idaho. Besides bringing us a sense of why he loved this work so much that he did it for at least ten summers, he explores the sense of place and thoughts on the American wilderness and explores many other ideas. Though I wasn't able to have him as a professor, I am glad I was able to benefit from his teachings through this book.
Fire lookouts in wilderness areas have long been intriguing to me. There is quite a bit of interesting information dealing with the Idaho wilderness areas and the forest service in general. It was also interesting to read of the thoughts of someone who spent many summers alone in the Frank Church wilderness area as a lookout. I have often thought that would be a great summer job. Not a remarkable read but I enjoyed it because I could picture the areas he was describing, especially since I have recently driven through some of them.