Geograpy


Spell of the Tiger: The Man-Eaters of Sundarbans
The Dark Romance of Dian Fossey
Lala Salama: A Tanzanian Lullaby
How the Gods Created the Finger People (Spanish Edition)
George Washington
Asher and the Capmakers
Remy and Lulu
Changing Woman and her Sisters: Stories of Goddesses from Around the World
This is the Greatest Place!: The Forbidden City and the World of Small Animals (We All Live in the Forbidden City)
Uncommon Traveler: Mary Kingsley in Africa
The Water Gift and the Pig of the Pig
The Greatest Liar on Earth
Womankind: Faces of Change Around the World
The Gift of the Pirate Queen
Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History
Miles Harvey
A map has no vocabulary, no lexicon of precise meanings. It communicates in lines, hues, tones, coded symbols, and empty spaces, much like music. Nor does a map have its own voice. It is many-tongued, a chorus reciting centuries of accumulated knowledge in echoed chants. A map provides no answers. It only suggests where to look: Discover this, reexamine that, put one thing in relation to another, orient yourself, begin here... Sometimes a map speaks in terms of physical geography, but just as of ...more
Miles Harvey, The Island of Lost Maps: A True Story of Cartographic Crime