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The great beach

Chapter 2: Foreword
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About This Book

The author offers a guided series of natural-history essays about a Cape Cod outer beach, blending close observations of shifting sands, dunes, marshes, birds, and marine resources with reflections on coastal geology and changing human presence. Chapters trace how the shoreline is continually remade by tides, storms, and currents, describe plant and animal life adapted to a mobile landscape, and consider historical encounters and contemporary challenges of ownership, conservation, and development. Attentive to light, rhythm, and impermanence, the book balances scientific detail, personal perception, and practical questions about stewardship as it invites readers to appreciate the dynamic relations between sea, shore, and people.

Foreword

I suppose that anyone writing another book about Cape Cod can be convicted of temerity, in the face of such predecessors as the three Henrys—Thoreau, Beston, and Kittredge—as well as Dr. Wyman Richardson. However, each to his own eye. I write about the Cape because of the circumstances of living there, long enough to have begun to learn a little about it; also, the coast is long and the sea will not stop with the outer beach. All Americans who not only love nature but stand in awe of it will be more and more hard put to explain their reasons, as we crowd our magnificent land and diminish it in proportion to the size of our demands. In The Great Beach are some of my reasons.

I am grateful to Dr. Alfred C. Redfield, Dr. John M. Zeigler, Mr. Joseph Chace, Dr. Loren C. Petry, Dr. Howard L. Sanders, and Dr. Ransom Somers for various assistance during the writing of this book, and hope they will not have any serious objections to the way I have used such information as they may have given me. This book also owes a great deal to the discerning and useful criticisms made by Richard K. Winslow, of Doubleday.