Steven Nowakowski Publishing Steven Nowakowski Publishing i(25554360 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 y separately published work icon Peter Hitchcock - Defender of Forests : His Story Protecting Tall Eucalypts and Rainforests Peter Hitchcock , Kuranda : Steven Nowakowski Publishing , 2024 29142072 2024 single work autobiography

'Peter Hitchcock was writing this book at the time of his death in 2019. It is his story of a lifetime of connection with Australia’s tall eucalypt forests and rainforests, and their conservation. It is a dual story of his life, and the science and conservation of the tall eucalypt forests, their use by Aboriginal people, their ‘discovery’ by early European explorers, their exploitation by European settlers and those who followed them, the battles and successes for their conservation, and the management which will be needed to conserve them in the future. Peter made extraordinary national and global contributions to forest conservation, rainforest protection, World Heritage, and national parks. He was a visionary, with a green future for our planet firmly in his sights. Peter Hitchcock left an indelible mark on nature conservation and on those who knew him. His determination to win results for the environment in the face of adversity is legendary. Humanity owes much to Peter Hitchcock. He made the world a better place. And now, there is one less great warrior for the planet.'  (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon A Feeling for Nature : A Natural History Memoir - Notes from a Golden Age Stanley Breeden , Kuranda : Steven Nowakowski Publishing , 2023 25554368 2023 single work autobiography

'If humanity survives, Stan Breeden’s memoir is destined to be a natural classic. For eight decades he has been a peerless observer and chronicler of Earth’s wilds and wildlife. In this book are some of the most poignant accounts of the human affinity with nature that have ever flowed from pen to paper. No one has written it up with finer or easier words to read than these. In his search for meaning our human soul is pivotal.

' Beyond the reach of deductive science (brain) are feelings (soul) like those experienced lying beneath the giant eucalypts in Tasmania's Styx forest, or at Uluru, 'overpowering in its size, its sheerness, its isolation, its beauty and its silent mystery - a quality never captured in photographs or film.' 'Science denies our soul. Art, too busy being provocative, devalues our feelings. The result is a relentless widening of the chasm between people and nature, exacerbating the creeping malaise of the Nature Deficit Disorder.' When young Breeden gave up on university, he had 'wanted to feel nature with all my senses, but also with my very being, my soul'. Later, in the dunes of Cooloola, then threatened by sand mining but now protected, he reckoned that 'if we could just show people the splendorous and seemingly miraculous workings of the natural world, it would become so obvious that nature needed protecting that there would be no need for conflict'. It was a time when we held high hopes that humankind would turn green. How wrong our expectations were. Yet Breeden has persisted as one of the world's finest presenters of the splendours of nature right through to this new epoch of defiant environmental activism. His presentations through National Geographic, his marvellous books on nature, and his role in establishing Queensland's Wildlife Preservation Society, speak for themselves. The humble Stan Breeden wants a new Shakespeare to 'find words - full of drama and imagination - that make nature come alive in our minds.' We need only read this book.' (Publication summary)

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