billy.pilgrim wrote: ↑Wed Feb 01, 2023 2:11 pm
O Really wrote: ↑Wed Feb 01, 2023 11:14 am
I'll help you look - I haven't read it but I know what you're referring to. There's a lot of information about the plume issue at the Audubon Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary including an area where they used to hunt.
https://corkscrew.audubon.org/
I think Watson is in the title
Some of us old people are slow thinkers
"Killing Mr. Watson" its a wonderful book and extremely accurate.
Whack should read it. In a way he reminds me of Cormick McCarthy
Vrede may know more about him.
Wikipedia
"Peter Matthiessen (May 22, 1927 – April 5, 2014) was an American novelist, naturalist, wilderness writer, zen teacher and CIA Operative.[1] A co-founder of the literary magazine The Paris Review, he was the only writer to have won the National Book Award in both nonfiction (The Snow Leopard, 1979, category Contemporary Thought) and fiction (Shadow Country, 2008).[2] He was also a prominent environmental activist."
"In 2008, at age 81, Matthiessen received the National Book Award for Fiction for Shadow Country, a one-volume, 890-page revision of his three novels set in frontier Florida that had been published in the 1990s.[4][5] According to critic Michael Dirda, "No one writes more lyrically [than Matthiessen] about animals or describes more movingly the spiritual experience of mountaintops, savannas, and the sea."[6]"
Killing Mr Watson makes up the first part of the 3 novels reworked as Shadow Country.
He beat these assholes
"Shortly after the 1983 publication of In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, Matthiessen and his publisher Viking Penguin were sued for libel by David Price, a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, and William J. Janklow, the former South Dakota governor. The plaintiffs sought over $49 million in damages; Janklow also sued to have all copies of the book withdrawn from bookstores."
This is interesting
"In September of the following year came the field trip to Himalayan Nepal. Matthiessen later became a Buddhist priest of the White Plum Asanga.[19] He gave dharma transmission to three students: Sensei Madeline Ko-I Bastis, Sensei Michel Engu Dobbs, and Sensei Dorothy Dai-En Friedman.[20] Before practicing Zen, Matthiessen was an early pioneer of LSD. He said his Buddhism evolved fairly naturally from his drug experiences.[21] He argued that it was unfortunate that LSD had become outlawed over time, given its potentially beneficial effects as a spiritual and therapeutic tool (when administered with the right care and attention) and was critical of a figure such as Timothy Leary in terms of the long-term reputation of the drug.[22]
In 1980, Matthiessen married Maria Eckhart, born in Tanzania, in a Zen ceremony on Long Island"
Trump: “We had the safest border in the history of our country - or at least recorded history. I guess maybe a thousand years ago it was even better.”