Abstract

As the latest addition to the University of Utah Press's series highlighting writings of selected national parks, The Grand Teton Reader offers selections of the best writings to come out of Grand Teton. The earliest is Nathaniel Langford's account of his accent of Mount Hayden. In addition to Langford, this volume reproduces other riveting stories of adventure and exploration, notably a piece by Grace Gallatin Seton-Thompson returning late at night after a weary day on the mountain, and another by the accomplished Elizabeth D. Woolsey bivouacking on Mount Moran. Todd Wilkinson rounds out the selections with a plea to conserve what wild remains in the Greater Yellowstone region before it is overwhelmed by development, tourism, and climate change.

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