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A Natural History of Empty Lots: Field Notes from Urban Edgelands, Back Alleys, and Other Wild Places by
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Forrest
is on page 184 of 296
Had a flood of thoughts on this that is too long for a progress update. I'll be writing this in my journal (yes, I keep a journal) and transcribe it later, when I'm done with the book. It's actually given me impetus to dedicate more time to getting this thing read and done.
— Feb 02, 2026 05:04PM
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Forrest
is on page 162 of 296
The last section was decent. Lots of ups and downs with this book.
— Jan 10, 2026 07:20PM
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Forrest
is on page 133 of 296
Is this book good, or just nice? I toggle back and forth between opinions on this one. I can't decide if it's "big" or "small," and I frankly only have an ill-conceived hint of a notion about what I even mean by that. It has its moments, but, then again, it has its moments, whatever that means in my intellectually lazy assessment. Maybe this book isn't for me, or I'm not for it?
— Dec 30, 2025 07:06PM
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Forrest
is on page 110 of 296
I like Brown's approach: Not alarmist, but not letting us off the hook for our environmental sins so easily, either. There's a touch of sadness and a touch of hope in those interstitial spaces where wilderness and domesticated spaces meet. I find a particularly wry, grim humor at work when Brown points out that roadkill might be one of the best indicators that wildness persists even in our most urbanized areas.
— Dec 11, 2025 06:38PM
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