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The Ecology of Herbal Medicine introduces botanical medicine
through an in-depth exploration of the land, presenting a unique
guide to plants found across the American Southwest. An
accomplished herbalist and geographer, Dara Saville offers readers
an ecological manual for developing relationships with the land and
plants in a new theoretical approach to using herbal medicines.
Designed to increase our understanding of plants' rapport with
their environment, this trailblazing herbal speaks to our innate
connection to place and provides a pathway to understanding the
medicinal properties of plants through their ecological
relationships. With thirty-nine plant profiles and detailed color
photographs, Saville provides an extensive materia medica in which
she offers practical tools and information alongside inspiration
for working with plants in a way that restores our connection to
the natural world.
Historian Author Jesse Hardin gives us a detailed look at the
complex lives of 11 of the most fascinating Sheriffs and Marshals
of the historic American West - the good, the bad, and the
conflicted. Find a spot by the fire, for a lyrical journey into
lesser known history, unmasking the popular hero Wyatt Earp as the
con-artist and pimp he really was, demonstrably courageous but a
total scoundrel... and by singing the praises of the truly
honorable and heroic "men behind the badge" whose deeds so often go
unsung: Elfego Baca, Wyatt Earp, Harry Morse, Bucky O'Neill, John
Joshua Webb, Wild Bill Hickok, Pat Garrett, Burton Mossman, George
Scarborough, Bat Masterson, and Bear River Tom Smith Books and
movies have long painted the West in a certain way, with a black
and white version of history, wholly good guys versus the purely
evil. Only trouble is, "it didn't happen thataway, hoss " From
Hardin's Preface: "Lawmen, even the most amazingly brave of them,
embody a mix of compassion and prejudice, generosity and avarice.
None are the complete good guy heroes that we once read comic books
about or idolized on the silver screen. Nor were even the worst of
them likely to be totally bad as some revisionists insist. Like all
humans, they sometimes did things they shouldn't have, while other
times gambling with their safety in order to save a stranger's
life. It's only once we cease the lionizing and demonizing - the
cynical sniping and blind worshipping - that we can look again at
these fascinating personas from the 19th and 20th Centuries for the
incredibly complex individuals they were, people with common human
traits and troubles doing extraordinary and occasionally incredible
things with an undeniable intensity of character." This realistic
approach doesn't rob us of heroes, what it does is help show us
whose actions were truly admirable, and helps us define for
ourselves the standards of just action and a life worthy of
emulation. Hardin's stories not only take us back to the days of
old but give us thought about how we live our own lives, and the
future we want to create and protect. As he writes: "I hope that it
serves to not only inform you about times and deeds past, but also
to inspire you in the now - kickstarting your imagination and
putting your ideas to the test, getting you up and off of your
chairs and outside where you can act out your own valued missions,
and attempt the heroic. And maybe affirming your decision to keep
an old shotgun in the closet or under the bed, since opposing
injustice and doing good is the job of every citizen even in a land
with a zillion rules and laws... whether we work in law enforcement
or take pride in being social outlaws. " "Hardin's ability to draw
the reader's mind into deeper contemplation is one of the hallmarks
of a great historical work." -Boge Quinn, GunBlast.com Hardin finds
that both the best and worst of the old time lawmen had something
in common: they were all darn interesting - determined, risking
their lives for one thing or another, living the great adventure.
"It is not the timid, the self-doubting and retiring whose
experiences and efforts will be remembered," Hardin concludes. "It
is the living of interesting, passion filled, highly driven lives
that makes the tales of these eleven lawmen so memorable, and is
that which can make our own lived stories worth retelling." "Hardin
has a fascinating style.... almost lyrical. His perspective on the
Old West is both romantic and dramatic" -Ned Schwing, Gun Digest
Books "Read the truth about these 11 Old West lawmen and enjoy real
history " -John Taffin
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