Riverwalking : Reflections on Moving Water
Riverwalking : Reflections on Moving Water
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Author(s): Moore, Kathleen D.
Moore, Kathleen Dean
ISBN No.: 9780156004619
Pages: 224
Year: 199608
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 19.25
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Kathleen Dean Moore is an essayist, philosophy professor, activist, parent, and lover of all things green or flowing. Her first book of nature essays, Riverwalking: Reflections on Moving Water, is set on Oregon's wild rivers. The rocky intertidal edge of the sea is the setting for the essays in Holdfast: At Home in the Natural World. The Pine Island Paradox, which begins under the cold salt sun of southeast Alaska, makes the case for an ethic of care based on the kinship of all being. The books have won the Pacific Northwest Booksellers' Award, the Sigurd Olson Nature Writing Award, and the Oregon Book Award. Her forthcoming book of essays, Wild Comfort: A Book of Healing, will tell of the wild Earth's power to move us from sorrow to courage and hope. Moore writes about cultural, spiritual, and moral connections to the natural world for magazines such as Orion, Audubon, Discover, The Sun, and the New York Times Magazine. She serves on the Board of Directors for the Orion Society and for the Island Institute in Sitka, Alaska.


Moore is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and University Writer Laureate at Oregon State University in Corvallis, where she teaches environmental ethics, Native American philosophy, and a field course on the philosophy of nature. She is the author of several critical thinking textbooks and a study of the ethics of forgiveness, Pardons: Justice, Mercy, and the Public Interest (Oxford UP), selected by Choice as an "Outstanding Academic Book" of the year. She publishes about environmental ethics and moral reasoning in academic journals such as Conservation Biology and the Journal of Forestry and in books about the management of forest and ocean resources. She is co-editor of three new anthologies: Rachel Carson: Legacy and Challenge, In the Blast Zone: Catastrophe and Renewal on Mount St. Helens, and How It Is: The Native American Philosophy of V.F. Cordova. At OSU, Moore is the founding director of the Spring Creek Project for Ideas, Nature, and the Written Word.


Its mission is to bring together the practical wisdom of the environmental sciences, the analytic clarity of philosophy, and the emotional power of the written word to re-imagine our relation to the natural world. This is the base for her work as a public speaker, educator, and activist, convinced that we have an obligation to leave to the future a world at least as rich in possibilities as the world we inherited. Moore lives in Corvallis, Oregon, with her husband, a biologist. They have two grown children -- an ecologist and an architect. Moore writes in the WaterShed, a tiny writers' studio that her daughter designed to gather water from the roof and pour it past the door into a trough where deer come to drink.


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