
Give the Gift of Choice!
Too many options? Treat your friends and family to their favourite stores with a Bayshore Shopping Centre gift card, redeemable at participating retailers throughout the centre. Click below to purchase yours today!Purchase HereHome
Letters from the Smokies
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Letters from the Smokies in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.20


By None
Letters from the Smokies in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.20
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Within the archives of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, a wealth of knowledge is tucked away in more than a million time-worn documents. This book, written by the park's librarian, makes some of the most salient of its letters readily accessible. Meet a Tennessee woman who wrote about Southern life under a male pseudonym. Follow celebrated ornithologist Roger Tory Peterson on an epic road trip that included the Smokies. Learn how an artificial lake would have engulfed the park's beloved Cades Cove. And hear the remarkable tale of a Smokies bobcat gifted to a US president. Within a three-century span, archivist Michael Aday captures stories of people whose voices we don't often hear: Jewell Manor's grief at the death of her cousin Charley; "retailer of spirits" Deborah McGee; early politician Anne Davis, receiving a congratulatory letter about the passage of a bill authorizing the purchase of 78,000 acres of land from the Little River Lumber Company for a new national park. The letters Aday has chosen, sensitively presented, explained, and contextualized, represent the centuries-long development of a region in a way that makes history tangible, immediate, and recognizably human.
Within the archives of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, a wealth of knowledge is tucked away in more than a million time-worn documents. This book, written by the park's librarian, makes some of the most salient of its letters readily accessible. Meet a Tennessee woman who wrote about Southern life under a male pseudonym. Follow celebrated ornithologist Roger Tory Peterson on an epic road trip that included the Smokies. Learn how an artificial lake would have engulfed the park's beloved Cades Cove. And hear the remarkable tale of a Smokies bobcat gifted to a US president. Within a three-century span, archivist Michael Aday captures stories of people whose voices we don't often hear: Jewell Manor's grief at the death of her cousin Charley; "retailer of spirits" Deborah McGee; early politician Anne Davis, receiving a congratulatory letter about the passage of a bill authorizing the purchase of 78,000 acres of land from the Little River Lumber Company for a new national park. The letters Aday has chosen, sensitively presented, explained, and contextualized, represent the centuries-long development of a region in a way that makes history tangible, immediate, and recognizably human.

















