
John Neff (2)
Author of Katahdin: An Historic Journey - Legends, Exploration, and Preservation of Maine's Highest Peak
For other authors named John Neff, see the disambiguation page.
John Neff (2) has been aliased into John W. Neff.
Works by John Neff
Works have been aliased into John W. Neff.
Katahdin: An Historic Journey - Legends, Exploration, and Preservation of Maine's Highest Peak (2006) 25 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Neff, John W.
- Birthdate
- 20th century
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- Maine Appalachian Trail Club
Appalachian Trail Conservancy (board member)
Friends of Baxter State Park (first president)
Members
Reviews
Katahdin: An Historic Journey - Legends, Exploration, and Preservation of Maine's Highest Peak by John Neff
For those who love Maine's Baxter State Park and its spectacular mountain, Katahdin, this book will only add to the depth and breadth of this feeling. Many trails, mountains, lakes, and campgrounds have rich stories associated with them and Neff tells these with grace and humour.
It is strange that the author gives the lumber industry such a free ride. This in spite of the fact that in the course of the book he describes in passing the challenge of Katahdin trail builders as the lumber show more industry obliterated trail after trail over the years, the lumbering practices of blowing up Katahdin area stream beds to prevent logjams and blowing up boulders on the mountain face to facilitate hauling out lumber, not to mention the devastated forests, derelict buildings, dams, and equipment left behind as lumber companies exhausted Katahdin area timber and moved on to exploit elsewhere. And also given that the timber interests were the main lobby that for many years successfully frustrated both Baxter's legislative and private efforts to preserve the Katahdin area. show less
It is strange that the author gives the lumber industry such a free ride. This in spite of the fact that in the course of the book he describes in passing the challenge of Katahdin trail builders as the lumber show more industry obliterated trail after trail over the years, the lumbering practices of blowing up Katahdin area stream beds to prevent logjams and blowing up boulders on the mountain face to facilitate hauling out lumber, not to mention the devastated forests, derelict buildings, dams, and equipment left behind as lumber companies exhausted Katahdin area timber and moved on to exploit elsewhere. And also given that the timber interests were the main lobby that for many years successfully frustrated both Baxter's legislative and private efforts to preserve the Katahdin area. show less
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 1
- Members
- 25
- Popularity
- #508,560
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 9
