Book Description
Bigger than the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, and Yosemite combined, the Adirondack Park contains a stunning array of mountains, wild lands, forests, rivers and lakes, waterfalls, and deep gorges. The Adirondack are also dotted with small towns, but due to stringent zoning laws, the park has not been subjected to vast real-estate development. Photographer Carl Heilman captures the untouched essence of the Adirondacks in this book-from its highest peaks to its foothills. His grand vistas show how humans and nature can coexist peacefully but also raise the debate between public and private ownership of park land and the choice between development and conservation.
With many of its 100 color photographs taken with a panoramic camera, this elegant, oblong book will appeal to lovers of outdoor photography and to the thousands of visitors that flock to the Adirondacks every year.
About the Author
Carl Heilman is an outdoorsman, snowshoe-maker, and well-known Adirondack photographer who has lived in the area since 1973. His photographs have been published in Outside, National Parks, Adirondack Life, and other magazines, and his work has been very popular in limited-edition prints and panoramic posters. Since 1985 he has produced a number of multi-image shows on the Adirondacks, two of which have been aired on public television. His most recent program, "The Adirondacks: A Wilderness of Waterways," was produced in 1994 for the Adirondack Park Visitors Interpretive Center, and is shown there on an ongoing basis.
Bill McKibben is a former staff writer for The New Yorker and a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books. This Adirondack resident's bestselling books include The End of Nature, The Age of Missing Information, The Comforting Whirlwind, and Hope, Human and Wild: True Stories of Living Lightly on the Earth.