Intelligent reflections on various cultural preoccupations and strong undercurrents of thought both in American society at large and within environmentalism more specifically. A nice blend of personal, scholarly, and journalistic styles.
I particularly liked the essay "Rootless Professors," which drew some tentative conjectures about the consequences of having a very mobile academic class whose knowledge as well as personal experience is predominately abstract and cosmopolitan in nature, as opposed to local and concrete. The point has been made before (by folks like David Orr) that this 'rootlessness' is part of what prevents a development of ecological literacy: a sense of place and an understanding of how that place functions, and how its social and biological workings are intertwined. Zencey suggests that not only is this the case, but also that a professoriate that encourages an ideal of knowledge and of social relations that exists in the abstract might be a possible encouragement of nationalism; the nation-state substitutes for the more local communities which students are encouraged to leave for the sake of becoming cosmopolitans themselves, when they find themselves reaching for some sort of broader social body to belong to. The style of these essays means that no real empirical argument is presented in support of this suggestion, but I find it an interesting point nonetheless, and think the argument has some possible merit.