Throughout the eastern United States, hundreds of colleges and universities own acres of forested lands. These holdings range from modest parcels like Virginia Tech’s eleven-acre Stadium Woods to more substantial tracts like Rutgers University’s five-hundred-acre William L. Hutcheson Memorial Forest in New Jersey. This book features fifteen notable campus forests in eleven states in the eastern United States, stretching from North Georgia, on up through the Ohio Valley and the mid-Atlantic region, into coastal Maine. The schools range from small religious colleges to state land-grant schools and Ivy League universities. The forests represent diverse ecosystems and attitudes on management: Some are left wild, notable for their tracts of old growth, while others are more contained or controlled, intended more for recreation than conservation or research. Many of these woodlands face considerable challenges; while some are protected in perpetuity, others are threatened by money troubles and development. All face ecological threats. But each forest is managed differently, reflecting the various ways it serves its campus and local community: as a place for research, recreation, and preservation. Woodlands of the Mind serves as a travel book for wanderers and armchair adventurers alike. These fifteen narratives, or “rambles,” guide readers through forests that range from small, hidden parks to vast preserves. Like an engaging travel companion, the essays discuss each forest’s ecology, landscape architecture, and history—especially the history of American universities and the relationship between higher education and land management and protection.
Travelers, tree lovers, and armchair trekkers all, Woodlands of the Mind is a must-have book for you. In it, you’ll find campus woods to ramble that most readers, like me, never knew existed. And now you can explore them by field trip or by opening the cover of this beautiful book. So pack a lunch, grab this book, and take a hike with O’Donnell and Honeycutt, these curious, companionable, and expert guides. -- Jim Minick * author of The Intimacy of Spoons and/or Without Warning: The Tornado of Udall, Kansas * The essays in Woodlands of the Mind wander, as if through a forest, often arriving at exciting and unexpected terrain. This book is part invitation and part evocation: readers are encouraged to explore and reconnect with the natural world. There's magic waiting for us to behold, if only we open ourselves up to the flora and fauna that surround us. -- Zackary Vernon * author of Eating on a Mountain at the End of the World * Kevin O’Donnell and Scott Honeycutt are subtle guides to the ecologies and histories surrounding university forests—everything from global trade to Hiroshima to Hurricane Hugo. It’s a gift, how they help us see (and even smell!) the woods in these landscapes while they ponder the vital relationship between people and trees. -- Erika Howsare * author of The Age of Deer: Trouble and Kinship with Our Wild Neighbors * This collection is delightful! O'Donnell's and Honeycutt's distinctive writing styles transport readers to forest preserves across multiple states, from Rome, Georgia, to Brunswick, Maine, with many varied stops along the way. It's a trip worth making! -- Erica Abrams Locklear * author of Appalachia on the Table * Forests owned and managed by colleges and universities are surprising places to encounter important natural habitats. Woodlands of the Mind offers an enlightening and entertaining guide to such places in the eastern United States and their important roles as protectors of rare and endangered habitats, recreational areas, and educational laboratories. -- Daniel S. Pierce * author of The Great Smokies: From Natural Habitat to National Park *
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