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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Neuzil , Norman SimsPublisher: University of Minnesota Press Imprint: University of Minnesota Press Dimensions: Width: 25.40cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 1.497kg ISBN: 9780816681174ISBN 10: 0816681171 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 15 November 2016 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsMark Neuzil and Norman Sims have written a wonderfully detailed biography of the vessel that made North America possible, treating it as a living, breathing personality. As enjoyable as a swift, steady, and smooth river, this is the ideal book for canoeists the perfect canoe trip of a read. Roy MacGregor, author of Canoe Country: The Making of Canada Canoes is a fantastic adventure. -Washington Post A fascinating cultural and technological history that, with its hundreds of color and black-and-white images, including many by renowned artists, is a visual as well as informative feast. -Booklist Deep history...from the crudest dugouts through the most elegant cedar strips to featherweight polymers of today, with hundreds of color photos and a score of profiles of the people who made and paddled them. -Star Tribune Lovely and practical. -Toronto Star Whether you love to paddle, cherish the look of the vintage canoe hanging above your fireplace or simply just appreciate canoes, this book is for you. -Cabin Living Magazine The coffee table-size book looks to be a must-have for paddlers and others with a penchant for the canoe's rich history, -Pioneer Press Written from the environmentalist point of view, there's some interesting revelations and photos. -Ely Echo No matter what era of the canoe story you might have a special spot for, this book will certainly take a cherished place in your library collection. -Paddle Making (and Other Canoe Stuff) The coffee table-size book looks to be a must-have for paddlers and others with a penchant for the canoe's rich history. -Grand Forks Herald This book is just superbly written, photographed and illustrated. It is the ultimate coffee table at the cabin book. -Trout Magazine This nice, sturdy, cloth hardcover - printed on thick, durable glossy pages - is a good coffee-table book that can either be read from beginning to end or by cherry-picking through chapters of personal interest. Just short of 400 pages, the book is liberally illustrated with beautiful historic artwork and photography in vivid color. -The Recorder Some of the eventual pride and creative care that goes into modern canoe-making must have gone into making this elaborate book of deep history with its commanding format as well as many historical and color photographs, paintings and illustrations, not to mention professional writing and editing. -The Keene Sentinel [Canoes] ... explores the humble canoe's outsized role in exploration, economic development, politics and popular culture. -Minnpost.com A delightful book that satisfies both intellectual curiosity and artistic appetite. -American Whitewater Mark Neuzil and Norman Sims have written a wonderfully detailed biography of the vessel that made North America possible, treating it as a living, breathing personality. As enjoyable as a swift, steady, and smooth river, this is the ideal book for canoeists-the perfect canoe trip of a read. -Roy MacGregor, author of Canoe Country: The Making of Canada Canoes is that rare cultural history that manages to transport through its very subject: the North American canoe. This book is fascinating and thorough and wonderfully accessible. It's also the definitive work on the single most important conveyance in this continent's rich past. It'll carry you away like a beautifully crafted cedar strip canoe. -Peter Geye This book is an outstanding overview of canoes with a lot of information that isn't covered anywhere else. I thoroughly enjoyed it. -Benson Gray, Wooden Canoe Heritage Association historian Mark Neuzil and Norman Sims have written a wonderfully detailed biography of the vessel that made North America possible, treating it as a living, breathing personality. As enjoyable as a swift, steady, and smooth river, this is the ideal book for canoeists the perfect canoe trip of a read. Roy MacGregor, author of <i>Canoe Country: The Making of Canada</i></p> <i>Canoes</i> is that rare cultural history that manages to transport through its very subject: the North American canoe. This book is fascinating and thorough and wonderfully accessible. It s also the definitive work on the single most important conveyance in this continent s rich past. It ll carry you away like a beautifully crafted cedar strip canoe. Peter Geye</p> This book is an outstanding overview of canoes with a lot of information that isn t covered anywhere else. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Benson Gray, Wooden Canoe Heritage Association historian</p> Author InformationMark Neuzil is a professor of communication and journalism at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of seven books and a frequent writer and speaker on environmental themes. A former wilderness guide and summer park ranger, Neuzil is an avid outdoorsman who began canoeing in the 1960s with his family. He is a past board member of the Society of Environmental Journalists and Friends of the Mississippi River. Norman Sims is a retired honors professor from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and a past president of the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies. This is his sixth book. A longtime whitewater canoeist and an active member of both the Appalachian Mountain Club and the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association, Sims has a small collection of antique Morris wood-and-canvas canoes. John McPhee is the author of more than thirty books, including Encounters with the Archdruid (1971), The Survival of the Bark Canoe (1975), and Coming into the Country (1977). Since 1963, his articles and all of his books have appeared in The New Yorker magazine. He received the Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1977, and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Annals of the Former World in 1999. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |