Losing It All To Sprawl: How Progress Ate My Cracker Landscape

Author:   Bill Belleville ,  Raymond Arsenault ,  Gary R. Mormino
Publisher:   University Press of Florida
ISBN:  

9780813035024


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   31 March 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Losing It All To Sprawl: How Progress Ate My Cracker Landscape


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Overview

"One of Library Journal's Best Books of 2006 Winner, Bronze Medal, Florida Book Awards Winner, Al Burt Award ""Bill Belleville writes gorgeously and straight from the heart. This is a compelling and insightful book, and it's impossible to read it without feeling sadness, outrage and awe.""--Carl Hiaasen ""Bill Belleville writes about the old Florida, the real Florida, like a poet or maybe a preacherman--certainly a prophet. He's up there with Marjorie Stoneman Douglas and William Bartram, a chronicler of the green and blue glories of the palmetto scrub, the springs and the woods. Best of all, he's righteously angry about how the place Bartram called ""a glorious apartment in the sovereign palace of the Creator"" is being wrecked in the name of ""progress."" But as long as Belleville keeps turning out exquisite, moving and beautiful books like this, there may just be hope."" --Diane Roberts, author of Dream State: Eight Generations Of Swamp Lawyers, Conquistadors, Confederate Daughters, Banana Republicans And Other Florida Wildlife ""An eloquent and bittersweet goodbye to Florida.""--Jeff Klinkenberg, author of Seasons of Real Florida ""A work soaked in the shadow of change. . . . An important book in the personal history of a fast-changing state.""--John Lane, author of Waist Deep in Black Water Losing It All to Sprawl is the poignant chronicle of award-winning nature writer Bill Belleville and how he came to understand and love his historic Cracker farmhouse and ""relic"" neighborhood in central Florida, even as it was all wiped out from under him. Belleville's narrative is eloquent, informed, and impassioned, a saga in which tractors and backhoes trample through the woods next to his home in order to build the backbone of Florida sprawl--the mall. As heavy machinery encircles Belleville and his community--the noise growing louder and closer, displacing everything Belleville has called home for the past fifteen years--he tells a story that is much older, 10,000 years older. The story stretches back to the Timucua and the Mayaca living in harmony with Florida's environment; the conquistadors who expected much from, but also feared, this ""land of flowers""; the turn-of-the-century tourists ""modernizing"" and ""climatizing"" the state; the original Cracker families who lived in Belleville's farmhouse. In stark contrast to this millennia-long transformation is the whiplash of unbridled growth and development that threatens the nearby wilderness of the Wekiva River system, consuming Belleville's home and, ultimately, his very sense of place. In Florida, one of the nation's fastest growing states (and where local and state governments encourage growth), balancing use with preservation is an uphill battle. Sprawl spreads into the countryside, consuming not just natural lands but Old Florida neighborhoods and their unique history. In Losing It All to Sprawl, Belleville accounts for the impacts--social, political, natural, personal--that a community in the crosshairs of unsustainable growth ultimately must bear, but he also offers Floridians, and anyone facing the blight of urban confusion, the hope that can be found in the rediscovery and appreciation of the natural landscape."

Full Product Details

Author:   Bill Belleville ,  Raymond Arsenault ,  Gary R. Mormino
Publisher:   University Press of Florida
Imprint:   University Press of Florida
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.333kg
ISBN:  

9780813035024


ISBN 10:   0813035023
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   31 March 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

Weaves tales of vivid scenery and feral neighbors with the environmental devastation that overcame his rural neighborhood as the realtors and bulldozers rolled in. - E: The Environmental Magazine The title says it all. If you live here, you know what he's talking about. - Tampa Tribune Belleville shows the impact of relentless growth on one corner of Florida, a few houses on a dead end road,... a low-key community that had made its peace with nature, and how a mall and a few residential developers killed it. - South Florida Sun-Sentinel Belleville chronicles the building of a regional mall just outside Sanford; and how the mall and spin-off development of gas stations, condos, and subdivisions swallows up his rural dirt-road neighborhood of Florida cracker homes built in the 1920s.... There's plenty to learn and ponder as you follow Belleville's literary hike over the sandy uplands and lush swamp bottoms of Central Florida. - Florida Times-Union Reads like poetry and feels like a prayer. - Orlando Weekly


Author Information

Bill Belleville is a veteran author and documentary filmmaker specializing in environmental issues. His books include the critically acclaimed River of Lakes: A Journey on Florida's St. Johns River. Belleville won an Emmy for the production and scripting of Wekiva: Legacy or Loss? and was named Environmental Writer of the Year by Florida Audubon Society and Florida Wildlife Federation.

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