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Requiem for America's Best Idea
National Parks in the Era of Climate Change
Table of Contents
About The Book
Yochim worked for the National Park Service for nearly thirty years before being diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease). It was while fighting the disease that he wrote this last moving testament. Interwoven with descriptions of climate change’s effects on our national parks is the heartbreaking story of how the author, a legendary hiker and backpacker, lost control of his body to the point where he was finally forced to rely on an eye-tracking machine to write.
Climate change is indisputably happening around us, and our parks are changing, often irrevocably. If we don’t act now, Yochim argues, future changes will be much more severe, threatening the very essence of these irreplaceable wonders. America’s failure to meaningfully address the current climate crisis may well squander the vision that acclaimed western writer Wallace Stegner so memorably celebrated: “National parks are the best idea we ever had. Absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best, rather than our worst.”
Product Details
- Publisher: High Road Books (May 13, 2025)
- Length: 304 pages
- ISBN13: 9780826368195
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Raves and Reviews
Yochim drew his last breath while writing this manuscript, using eye-tracking technology because, long before, he'd lost the ability to type or speak. While the disease devastated his body, Yochim's memories of the parks sustained him. . . . Requiem for America's Best Idea is an exceptionally touching, persuasive, and urgent plea for preserving these 'natural cathedrals'--places of wonder, renewal, and transcendence--for future generations.--Foreword Reviews, starred review
“To see through these pages into Mike Yochm’s life is to bear witness to the flowering of a man’s mind and heart in the bright light of wild nature. His portraits of some of America’s great wildland parks fairly shimmer with the kind of attention mustered only by the intensely curious and the humble—someone willing always to look and listen deeply. Notably, while Yochim is writing from the agonizing doorstep of his own death, this is less a book about dying than a tale about what it feels like to be truly alive. Would that the scent and color of his love affair with nature, along with his unshakeable advocacy on its behalf, inspire generations to come.”—Gary Ferguson, author of The Eight Master Lessons of Nature: What Nature Teaches Us About Living Well in the World
“To see through these pages into Mike Yochm’s life is to bear witness to the flowering of a man’s mind and heart in the bright light of wild nature. His portraits of some of America’s great wildland parks fairly shimmer with the kind of attention mustered only by the intensely curious and the humble—someone willing always to look and listen deeply. Notably, while Yochim is writing from the agonizing doorstep of his own death, this is less a book about dying than a tale about what it feels like to be truly alive. Would that the scent and color of his love affair with nature, along with his unshakeable advocacy on its behalf, inspire generations to come.”—Gary Ferguson, author of The Eight Master Lessons of Nature: What Nature Teaches Us About Living Well in the World
“Imagine, for a moment, that you knew you were not long for the world but wanted to offer a gift back to society, a message that could positively affect the lives of future generations. For Michael Yochim, that’s precisely what this book represents: a heartfelt wake-up call for millions of people who love America’s national parks and are concerned about the deepening impacts of climate change. This book, which Yochim literally wrote up to the point of his last breath, is his way of getting us to care more about the crown-jewel nature preserves that belong to all of us—and, indeed, it will require all of us to come to their rescue.”—Todd Wilkinson, author of Last Stand: Ted Turner’s Quest to Save a Troubled Planet
“What an amazing book. Yochim manages to parallel the long-term destruction of our National Parks and wild lands—due to rising temperatures, receding glaciers, fire, and climate change in general—with his own physical decline due to the curse of ALS. I have been to the places he remembers in this book, and I must say he reconstructs their beauty in ways few of us could. This is truly a tragic work: the story of a man in his last moments alive holding onto a world of beauty that we are destroying.”—Kevin Mattson, Connor Study Professor of Contemporary History at Ohio University and author of We’re Not Here to Entertain: Punk Rock, Ronald Reagan, and the Real Culture War of 1980s America
“One of the finest, most evocative books I have ever read. It provides a panoramic view into the present state of life on planet Earth that is both profoundly beautiful and particularly alarming. It provides the realization that we are all borne by the flow of Nature through Paradise in peril.”—Jack Loeffler, author of Adventures with Ed: A Portrait of Abbey
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