Rivers, Forests, and Really Big Trees
An Irreverent History of Washington
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Lu par :
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Tyme Stemen
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De :
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Jordan Blake Carter
À propos de ce contenu audio
Washington State has never been content with being simple.
From the outside, it looks easy to explain. Rain. Trees. Coffee. A few volcanoes. People in fleece jackets who pretend they are not staring at the mountains even though they absolutely are. But that version of Washington leaves out nearly everything that matters.
This is a history of a place built on contradiction. Rain forests and deserts. Ports and wheat fields. Counterculture coffee shops and irrigation canals. Fierce environmental protection alongside relentless industrial ambition. A state that argues constantly with itself and somehow survives stronger for it.
Rivers, Forests, and Really Big Trees traces Washington’s story from the Indigenous nations who shaped the land for thousands of years, through waves of explorers who claimed things they barely understood, settlers who misjudged the weather and stayed anyway, and industries that reshaped both landscape and identity. Logging camps, railroad rivalries, city fires, maritime labor battles, aviation booms and busts, volcanic eruptions, counterculture movements, grunge music, tech empires, and the ongoing east west divide all collide in a narrative that refuses to be tidy.
This book does not treat history as a list of dates or a polite sequence of achievements. It treats it as a lived experience filled with ambition, conflict, ingenuity, bad decisions, stubborn resilience, and people doing their best in landscapes that regularly push back.
Written with humor, clarity, and respect for complexity, this irreverent history invites listeners to understand Washington as it actually is. Messy. Contradictory. Beautiful. Loud when necessary. Quiet when it matters. Always changing.
If you have ever loved this place, argued about it, misunderstood it, or tried to explain it to someone who thinks it rains nonstop, this book is for you.
History was never neat.
Washington never tried to be.
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