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Rachel Carson, a biologist by training, became a writer by writing. But it was her love of nature--and particularly the world between the tide lines near her summer cottage in Maine--that made her an environmentalist. When people began to recognize the dangers of pesticides in the 1950s, Carson was able to understand the science involved and explain it to the reading public. Still, Silent Spring would never have had the impact it did if Carson had not believed, fervently, that the indiscriminate use of environmentally persistent pesticides threatened the entire fabric of the natural world she loved.
Lear's biography contains too much inconsequential detail and says too little about the intellectual context in which Carson's ideas developed. Nevertheless, it offers a fine portrait of the environmentalist as a human being; an odd and obsessive woman buffeted by the difficulties of life, yet still ready to watch and wonder and find fascination in the world around her.
John R. Alden, a writer living in Michigan, is particularly interested in natural history and the history of environmental preservation.
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