Bad Naturalist

One Woman’s Ecological Education on a Wild Virginia Mountaintop
by Paula Whyman

Shipping to the U.S. only. Please see our International FAQ for more information.

$30.00


Preorder Item

This item is on Preorder, with an expected delivery date of January 07, 2025

Also available at

A journey of humor, humility, and awe as one woman attempts to restore 200 acres of farmland long gone-to-seed in the Blue Ridge Mountains, facing her own limitations while getting to know a breathtaking corner of the natural world.
 
When writer Paula Whyman climbs to a peak in the...
Read More

Published By Timber Press

Format Hardback

Category

Number Of Pages 256

Publication Date 01/07/2025

ISBN 9781643262178

Dimensions 6 inches x 9 inches


“With dry humor and an always engaging voice, Paula Whyman takes us on an entertaining and unexpected journey restoring a wild Virginia mountaintop. Bad Naturalist is a master class in ecology, humility, and perseverance, that will have you thinking about mid-life larks, plants, and gardens, in a whole new light.”
 

— Susan Coll, former president of the PEN/Faulkner Foundation and author of Real Life and Other Fictions

"A brilliant, richly layered exploration of the natural world, Paula Whyman’s gripping tale embeds the reader on a mountaintop, sweeping us through the landscape and her life while braiding memoir, biodiversity, expertise, and doubt, along with inevitable setbacks that she counters with sheer determination. Whyman, a ‘pretty good’ naturalist, is the perfect guide to today’s urgent questions, proposing some unexpected answers and delivering it all in unputdownable prose, with a sense of humor and a joyful spirit."
 

— Jordan Goodman, author of Planting the World: Joseph Banks and His Collectors, an Adventurous History of Botany

"How can someone who knows nothing about ecological restoration successfully rehab 200 acres of retired farmland? In Bad Naturalist, her self-deprecating, humorous, and thoroughly engaging book, Paula Whyman tells us exactly how. She describes the many pitfalls, explains how she triumphed over them, and details the many benefits of persevering, both for herself and for her mountaintop ecosystem. Why should landowners read this book? Because they own—and need to restore—most of the landscape, an awesome responsibility whose meaning Whyman has distilled for us.”

— Douglas Tallamy, New York Times bestselling author of Nature’s Best Hope

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.