![]() ![]() Subsequently, he received a doctorate from the University of Utah, and he returned to Gallup, where he traded in Indian jewelry and kachinas and opened his bookstore. After receiving an English degree in the sixties, Bulow worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, resided in Gallup, N.M., and taught English at Fort Wingate on the Navajo Reservation. This copy is inscribed by Edward Abbey to Ernie Bulow, bookman, publisher, and friend of the author, on the front free endpaper. It has now gone on to sell over two million copies taking its rightful place alongside Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac and Rachel Carson's Silent Spring as a classic of environmental and wilderness literature. Five thousand copies of the first edition were printed. The author's fourth book and first work of nonfiction. Drawings and jacket design by Peter Parnall. In a very attractive dust jacket, with light edge-wear, which includes a very short closed tear to the top edge of the rear panel. full brown cloth with white and brown stamped spine. ![]()
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