I didn’t know what direction this book would go before I started, so it was a bit of a surprise that it focused so heavily on the spiritual aspects of Cascadia to the exclusion of historical or broader cultural exploration. Still, it’s hard to deny that nature-inspired spirituality, which gives people a grounding without formal religion, is a prominent feature of this part of the world. It’s been like this a long time. My own family, coming to Cascadia five generations ago, were right with God, but this quickly passed, more surely and completely with each succeeding generation. The authors spend the book poking the bear from different angles to find out why, and how it impacts how Cascadians think and operate, and what it means for our future. It’s worthy and notable that the authors, despite being largely from Cascadia, are not shy on criticizing immature aspects of our nascent nature religion, like its absolutism. Still, this can’t be the last word on Cascadia. There are many other topics besides spirituality that set this part of North America apart, culturally and historically, that it’s a shame this wasn’t a series to give a fuller sense of what could have been quite a country, had the chips fallen a little differently.