Douglas Wood’s first book, Old Turtle, was hailed as an "instant classic." His other works, including the New York Times bestseller Grandad’s Prayers of the Earth and his humorous Can’t Do series, have earned such honors as the American Booksellers Book of the Year Award, the Christopher Medal, Parents’ Choice Award, International Reading Association Book of the Year Award, Smithsonian Notable Books for Children Award, Storytelling World Award, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Minnesota Association for Environmental Education. He has read his books at the White House and New York’s Lincoln Center. He lives with his family in a log cabin on the Mississippi River.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Little Lake
Echo Island to Lost Bay
The Secret Forest
Streams of Consciousness
The Gospel of Rocks
Time Wasted
Back to the Garden
Into a Smaller World
The Great Day That Dawns
Backcast
The Tao of the Canoe
Turtle Stories
A Poem of Flowers
By the Fire
The Last Sleep-Out
The Promontory
The Art of the Tale: The Cold Demise of Coffee Cup Charlie
Distant Thunder
Haunts of the Manitou
The Wild Wind
Marshes of Doubt
Swinging the Coffee
The Quest
Finding the Fawn
Gumption
The Stick Throwers
The Club
Hunting for Something Ethereal
Where Red Squirrels Live
Changing Skies
Base Camp
The Landscape of Time
Hello to Life
Downstream
The Stars of Sandfly
The Education of a Grandfather
All One Trip
Afterword
Douglas Wood’s first book, Old Turtle, was hailed as an “instant classic.” His other works, including the New York Times bestseller Grandad’s Prayers of the Earth and his humorous Can’t Do series, have earned such honors as the American Booksellers Book of the Year Award, the Christopher Medal, Parents’ Choice Award, International Reading Association Book of the Year Award, Smithsonian Notable Books for Children Award, Storytelling World Award, and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Minnesota Association for Environmental Education. He has read his books at the White House and New York’s Lincoln Center. He lives with his family in a log cabin on the Mississippi River.