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Rachel carson the sea
Rachel carson the sea





rachel carson the sea

In her second and third books, there are references to the rising and warming seas, but a man-made explanation for this isn’t put forth.

rachel carson the sea

Unlike 1962’s Silent Spring, her subversive argument against the overuse of insecticides, widely credited as a crucial step toward the founding of the Environmental Protection Agency, Carson’s first three books-recently collected by the Library of America under the moniker The Sea Trilogy-are neither calls to political action nor calls for social change. But neither the corals nor the mangroves, but the sea itself will determine when that which they build will belong to the land, or when it will be reclaimed for the sea.” The Sea Trilogy: Under the Sea-Wind / The Sea Around Us / The Edge of the SeaĬarson’s first book, Under the Sea-Wind (1941), about the migratory patterns of fish and birds along North America’s Atlantic coast, concludes: “For once more the mountains would be worn away by the endless erosion of water and carried in silt to the sea, and once more all the coast would be water again, and the places of its cities and towns would belong to the sea.” A decade later she published the National Book Award–winning The Sea Around Us (1951), whose final sentence is: “For all at last return to the sea-to Oceanus, the ocean river, like the ever-flowing stream of time, the beginning and the end.” And in 1955 her ode to shoreline ecologies, The Edge of the Sea, was yet another return to form: “As the years pass, and the centuries merge into the unbroken stream of time, these architects of coral reef and mangrove swamp build toward a shadowy future.







Rachel carson the sea