From Book News, Inc.
The author focuses on an ancient Oregon coast range forest through a span of about 60 years. The title refers to the fact that more than trees make up such a forest, and she includes information on the great variety of other inhabitants. The forest under discussion was logged in the 1940s and clearcut in the 1980s, and the author shows all that is lost when ancient forests are destroyed. Paper edition (unseen), $22.95. Book News, Inc.®, Portland, OR
Not Just Trees: The Legacy of a Douglas-Fir Forest FROM THE PUBLISHER
The word "unique" is overused. But in the case of Not Just Trees, that description is accurate.
Not Just Trees is the gracefully written story of life in an ancient Oregon Coast Range forest. Covering a span of more than sixty years, it is the tale of the mighty Douglas-firs and cedars and hemlocks that once grew there. But an ancient forest is more than just trees, and this book is also about the lives of great and small creatures and plants, of slugs and worms, spiders and bugs, butterflies and birds, lichens and mosses.
Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds began studying a small parcel of ancient forest in western Oregon while an undergraduate student at Linfield College. After receiving her doctorate she returned to Linfield to teach biology for more than thirty years and again study her beloved forest on Saddleback Mountain, recording its life through logging in the 1940s and clearcutting in the 1980s. This type of in-depth study, over so many years, has never been undertaken on a single western forest before, nor is it likely to ever be repeated.
Not Just Trees tells about the amazing variety of life in the forest. It is also the story of a tenacious woman, an ecologist who studied Oregon flora and fauna before there were guidebooks, at a time when precious few even knew what the word "ecology" meant.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
The author focuses on an ancient Oregon coast range forest through a span of about 60 years. The title refers to the fact that more than trees make up such a forest, and she includes information on the great variety of other inhabitants. The forest under discussion was logged in the 1940s and clearcut in the 1980s, and the author shows all that is lost when ancient forests are destroyed. Paper edition (unseen), $22.95. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.