Author | Mike MacDonald |
---|---|
Illustrator | Mike MacDonald |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Coffee Table Book |
Publisher | Morning Dew Press |
Publication date | Dec. 21, 2015 |
Media type | |
Pages | 240 pp (first edition) |
ISBN | 978-0-9963119-0-8 |
My Journey into the Wilds of Chicago is a photo-literary coffee table book by Mike MacDonald, with forewords by Bill Kurtis and Stephen Packard. [1] The book is a visual and educational journey through the prairies, savannas and other natural areas in the Chicago metropolitan area. [2]
The book contains more than 200 photographs and nearly two dozen essays and poems written by MacDonald about Chicago's wild side, ranging geographically from the lakefront to prairie lands just north of the border in Wisconsin, to Kankakee, Lockport, Batavia and McHenry County. [3]
My Journey into the Wilds of Chicago was the basis for the website Chicago Nature Now!, run by MacDonald. The website is a digital catalog of Chicago's forest preserves and provides updates of the area's natural events.
The book was positively received, including a review from Publishers Weekly which said, "This impressive, cloth-bound debut is a lucid perspective on the prairie and its native plants and animals; it is celebratory, soulful and poetic, evoking a strong affection for Chicago's unchecked wilderness in a city best known for its iconic lakefront and skyscrapers." [4]
Pleasant Prairie is a village in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Located in Kenosha County along the southwestern shoreline of Lake Michigan, Pleasant Prairie was home to 21,250 people at the 2020 census. The village is positioned directly south of the city of Kenosha and directly north of the Illinois border.
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Northerly Island is a 119-acre (48 ha) human-made peninsula and park located on Chicago's Lake Michigan lakefront. Originally constructed in 1925, Northerly Island was the former site of the Century of Progress world's fair and later Meigs Field airport and, since Meigs Field's closure, has been a recreational area part of Chicago's Museum Campus. It is the site of the Adler Planetarium, the Huntington Bank Pavilion, the Northerly Island Natural Area, the 12th Street Beach and numerous art installations. Per its name, Northerly Island was constructed as an island, but is connected to the lakefront by a causeway at the northern end carrying Solidarity Drive to the planetarium.
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