Blog Archives

2013-04-09



Mikhail Beketov
Mourning follows the death of Mikhail Beketov on Monday, April 8, 2013. Beketov was a Russian environmental journalist who has become a global symbol of the effects of government impunity and brutality. His death was a direct result of a beating in 2008 for his defense of Russia’s environment, especially the Khimki Forest from plundering Russian government officials.

1820-03-31


Anna Sewell
born this day in Great Yarmouth, England. Sewell was the author of the book Black Beauty, an impassioned plea against animal cruelty.

1904-03-02



Dr. Seuss
Theodor Seuss Geisel, author of childrens books, born on this day in 1904. Dr. Seuss’ book The Lorax , written in 1971, is especially well known as a cautionary environmental tale about a small creature who speaks “for the trees.” It was made into a Universal film and released on this day, Seuss’ birthday, in 2012.

1812-02-07


Charles Dickens
A journalist, novelist and humanitarian, Dickens was born this day in Portsmouth, England in 1812. Dickens was the author of many highly regarded novels and short stories, among them: A Christmas Carol; A Tale of Two Cities; Oliver Twist; Nicholas Nickelby; Great Expectations; and many more. Having grown up in dire poverty, Dickens provided a strong Christian voice for social reform during the 1830s – 1860s period in Britain.

1971-01-20

Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) A song by Marvin Gaye, “Mercy Mercy Me” is released this day in 1971. One line from the song: “What about this overcrowded land?How much more abuse from Man can she stand?”

1843-12-19


Christmas Carol
by Charles Dickens is first published by Chapman and Hall in London on this day in 1843. One of the strongest calls to conscience of any literary work in history, Christmas Carol has been a major influence on human feelings of ethics, compassion for the poor and insight into the hollow selfishness that falsely presents itself as economic necessity.

1863-12-16

George Santayana born on this day in 1863. He is best remembered for this aphorism: “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”

1834-03-24


William Morris

is born on this day in 1834. A writer, artist and leader of the Arts and Crafts Movement, Morris was also a fierce critic of the industrial revolution, wishing, in his epic poem, The Earthly Paradise, that he could transform England from a grimy workshop into a garden. The poem begins with an admonition:

Forget six counties overhung with smoke /
Forget the snorting steam and piston stroke/
Forget the spreading of the hideous town/
Think rather of the pack-horse on the down/
And dream of London, small, and white and clean /
The clear Thames bordered by its gardens green …

1921-05-12

Farley Mowat, Canda’s most famous writer and defender of the environment, was born this day in 1921. His books, including People of the Deer (1952), Never Cry Wolf (1963) and A Whale for the Killing (1972) depict the Canadian north and its animals in romantic and dramatic terms. Mowat won numerous literary and national awards, and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society named a ship after him. Mowat died on May 6, 2014. Green interview has a discussion with Mowatt.

1927-01-29

Edward Abbey is  born this day in 1927. Abbey was the author of 21 books, including The Monkey Wrench Gang, a 1975 book about sabotage (“monkey wrenching”) as environmental activism. Abbey’s non-fiction Desert Solitaire, published in 1968, describes life in the southeastern Utah canyonlands, and has been compared with Aldo Leopold’s Sand County Almanac and Henry David Thoreau’s Walden.