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How easy is it to go "back to the land" or just to lead a simple life? The author answers these questions with the narrative of his creation of a 330 acre back-to-the-land community in the forests of North Carolina near the university where he was teaching English. He left academia to create the Saralyn community and to pursue freelance writing and to raise his daughter. The American writer, Henry David Thoreau, who inspired many with his story of 2 years and 2 months near Walden Pond in Massachusetts also inspired many of the people who came to live at Saralyn. Thoreau famously concluded, "In wildness is the preservation of civilization." Kaufman, like Thoreau, built his own house and tended his own garden and forest. His conclusion after living 10 times as long in the woods is, "In civilization is the preservation of wildness." As he reaches this conclusion he deals with many of the myths about the nature of Nature and our place in it.
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This simple narrative for children 3 to 8 begins with leaping from a cliff onto boulders at the edge of Little Whale Cove on the Oregon coast. Children who are immersed in their own growing up will identify with Gosling. Gosling faces a growing up that is similar in important ways and very different in ways that illustrate the different character of humankind and the natural world. The author illustrates each page with pictures he took of Gosling as the young goose grew to become a mature goose like its parents.
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This book speaks to three audiences. They overlap, of course. For people who love wetlands, wildlife, and wilderness, I offer this for their celebration. Second, the pictures and captions and observations thoughts and stories for people who find in nature a spiritual presence, something higher and purer than humankind. Maybe the largest audience is all of us who wonder what the meaning of life is, how to grow old—or not to, how to accept that life means death.
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How Simple Is Life enlarges on the story of Coming Out of the Woods. It is the author's reflections some 20 years later about the lessons learned and current thinking about humankind and its natural environment. It includes photos of the forest and people of Saralyn as well as his daughter Sylvan who earned her Ph.D. in ecology and who became his co-author of Invasive Plants (Stackpole), now in its third edition.
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Kaufman teamed up with the well known and highly respected astrobiologist and biomolecular engineer David Deamer to explore the geopolitical implications of gene editing. The locations alternate between Oregon University in Eugene where a scientist has adopted a baby from Kazakhstan and Kazakhstan itself where a genetic genius plots to steal the baby girl because she has a genetic mutation that could turn Kazakhstan into a country of superior transhumans. Readers will not only enjoy the twists and turns and cultural revelations in the story but learn much about the powers of gene editing. The novel, which is also an audio book, was published by the science publisher Springer International as part of its select sci fi series.