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WILDFIRE by Ferin Davis Anderson

WILDFIRE

The Culture, Science, and Future of Fire

by Ferin Davis Anderson with Stephanie Sammartino McPherson

Pub Date: April 2nd, 2024
ISBN: 9781728424002
Publisher: Twenty-First Century/Lerner

Advocacy for Indigenous fire-management practices, a thorough account of wildfire science, information on firefighting—and a blazing black-and-orange color scheme—make this book a hot ticket.

Anderson, a scientist and enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, and prolific nonfiction author McPherson provide a balanced, well-written analysis of conflagrations. Paradoxically, fire causes damage but also has benefits, even as human land use competes with essential ecosystem regeneration. The authors contrast the natural role of wildfire in maintaining healthy ecosystems with horrific blazes that are worsened by mismanagement and climate change. Case studies highlight First Nations communities and individuals from around the world and show how scientists are increasingly considering Indigenous practices, sparking change. Scientists have come to accept what “for millennia, Indigenous peoples across the globe have understood,” that “by burning layers of dead vegetation that could otherwise become fuel, carefully tended fires lessened the chance of a disastrous wildfire.” These practices are also about “livelihood, traditions, beliefs, values, and spirituality.” The authors explain what fire is and describe fire suppression and prescribed burns in the U.S., conveying a lot of science in a palatable form. Climate change is at the heart of the story—and of this book. The text defines terms in context, contains helpful text boxes with additional information, and is supported by color photos.

Skillfully introduces the complex story of wildfires, Indigenous knowledge, and climate change.

(timeline, glossary, source notes, selected bibliography, further information, index, photo acknowledgments) (Nonfiction. 13-18)