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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Cornelia DeanPublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.553kg ISBN: 9780231084185ISBN 10: 0231084188 Pages: 296 Publication Date: 19 May 1999 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Language: English Table of ContentsReviewsAgainst the Tide flashes like a metaphorical lighthouse to warn scientists, policymakers, and the public about the state of the shoreline. -- Tom Drake, Science Entertaining and thoroughly thought provoking. -- American Scientist Dean powerfully argues [that] America may face a future of beachless beach towns. -- Time Magazine Dean has done a first-rate job of making coastal conservation interesting. Against the Tide would be good beach reading. -- David Rains Wallace, New York Times Book Review To anyone interested in the preservation of the nation's beaches this is the handbook -- incredibly well researched and interestingly presented. And that 'anyone'should be all of us for our beaches are a national heritage and a precious resource that we owe our future generations. -- Walter Cronkite Engaging yet informative... Y[oung] A[dult]s interested in environmental careers and beach lovers of all ages will get caught up in this book. Logically arranged and written in a straightforward style, it enables readers to look at the familiar with new and knowledgeable eyes. -- School Library Journal Dean has written a workmanlike description of the ongoing struggle to turn back the tide on America's beaches by pinning down our shorelines -- defying their essential nature, a continual dance of destruction and renewal. -- Heather Dewar, The Japan Times Dean's thoughtful and eloquent plea to save America's beaches from overdevelopment and erosion is destined to be a classic of environmental writing. -- Library Journal Best Books of 1999 For anyone who has ever walked along a beach in that Zen-like state that only beach walks provide, do not miss this book. Especially if you're a taxpayer... I honestly think this could be one of those rare books that changes government policy -- at local, state, and federal levels. -- Molly Ivins Against the Tide should be a potent weapon in the environmental effort to save what remains of our natural coastline. Everyone who reads it will be forcefully reminded that the Bible was right: it is not a good idea to build your house upon the sand. -- Kate Barnes, The Amicus Journal An eloquent, forceful plea to save America's rapidly eroding beaches and coastline. -- Publisher's Weekly Dean knows that the best advocacy is to lay out the whole story, all sides, fairly and neutrally... She has made her case so clearly and cleanly, with such persuasive examples, and so much credit where it is due, that I'm convinced. -- Ann Finkbeiner, New York Times An engaging overview of the powerful natural forces at work on the beach and why the various manmade strategies designed to alter them either don't work at all or don't work as intended. -- John Manuel, The Raleigh News & Observer Beachgoers, coastal residents, planners, and anyone with a love of the sea will enjoy reading this fascinating book about historic coastal communities, the ravages of past winter storms and summer hurricanes, and our often futile attempts to protect oceanfront property while preserving the beach. -- Library Journal Dean's opening chapter on the hurricane that flattened Galveston in 1900... is worth the price of the book. -- Discover Dean... covers considerable territory as she details the persistent efforts of developers and developer-prodded government agencies to 'armor' the coast against the action of wind and waves. But 'nature,' she notes, usually 'has the last word,' undercutting seawalls and toppling houses. -- Michael Kenney, Boston Globe Dean tells a gripping tale, drawing on her knowledge of the coasts of Massachusetts and New York, and on the experts who have spent a generation learning the working of sea and sand. -- Jeff Hecht, New Scientist Author Information"Cornelia Dean is science editor of the New York Times, where she writes frequently on coastal issues. She is also heard regularly on WQEW and WQXR's ""Health Times.""" Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |