Imagen del autor

Peter Matthiessen (1) (1927–2014)

Autor de El leopardo de las nieves

Para otros autores llamados Peter Matthiessen, ver la página de desambiguación.

51+ Obras 12,486 Miembros 219 Reseñas 5 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Peter Matthiessen was born in Manhattan, New York on May 22, 1927. He served in the Navy at Pearl Harbor. He graduated with a degree in English from Yale University in 1950. It was around this time that he was recruited by the CIA and traveled to Paris, where he became acquainted with several young mostrar más expatriate American writers. In the postwar years the CIA covertly financed magazines and cultural programs to counter the spread of Communism. While in Paris, he helped found The Paris Review in 1953. After returning to the United States, he worked as a commercial fisherman and the captain of a charter fishing boat. His first novel, Race Rock, was published in 1954. His other fiction works include Partisans, Raditzer, Far Tortuga, and In Paradise. His novel, Shadow Country, won a National Book Award. His novel, At Play in the Fields of the Lord, was made into a movie. He started writing nonfiction after divorcing his first wife. An assignment for Sports Illustrated to report on American endangered species led to the book Wildlife in America, which was published in 1959. His travels took him to Asia, Australia, South America, Africa, New Guinea, the Florida swamps, and beneath the ocean. These travels led to articles in The New Yorker as well as numerous nonfiction books including The Cloud Forest: A Chronicle of the South American Wilderness, Under the Mountain Wall: A Chronicle of Two Seasons of Stone Age New Guinea, Blue Meridian: The Search for the Great White Shark, The Tree Where Man Was Born, and Men's Lives. The Snow Leopard won the 1979 National Book Award for nonfiction. He died from leukemia on April 5, 2014 at the age of 86. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: © Jessie Close-Heroshots LLC.jpg

Series

Obras de Peter Matthiessen

El leopardo de las nieves (1978) 2,699 copias
País de sombras (2008) 1,248 copias
In the Spirit of Crazy Horse (1983) 1,128 copias
Killing Mister Watson (1990) 757 copias
Far Tortuga (1975) 538 copias
In Paradise (2014) 446 copias
Lost Man's River (1997) 292 copias
Wildlife in America (1959) 252 copias
African Silences (1991) 251 copias
Indian Country (1984) 235 copias
Bone by Bone (1999) 228 copias
Tigers in the Snow (2000) 170 copias
Sand Rivers (1981) 163 copias
Men's Lives (1986) 150 copias
East of Lo Monthang (1995) 68 copias
Raditzer (1961) 55 copias
Race Rock (1954) 45 copias
Partisans (1987) 39 copias
The Shorebirds of North America (1967) — Autor — 38 copias
Shadows of Africa (1992) 26 copias
Zen and the Writing Life (1999) 12 copias
Seal pool (1972) 7 copias
No Boundaries (1993) 7 copias
The Passionate Seekers (1955) 2 copias
The Great Auk Escape (1974) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Primavera silenciosa (1962) — Introducción, algunas ediciones6,507 copias
North American Indians (1995) — Introducción, algunas ediciones459 copias
The Portable Sixties Reader (2002) — Contribuidor — 327 copias
Bad Trips (1991) — Contribuidor — 233 copias
Epic: Stories of Survival from the World's Highest Peaks (1997) — Contribuidor — 174 copias
The Big New Yorker Book of Cats (2013) — Contribuidor — 132 copias
Heart of the Land: Essays on Last Great Places (1994) — Contribuidor — 106 copias
Tides: The Science and Spirit of the Ocean (2017) — Introducción, algunas ediciones103 copias
Totch: A Life in the Everglades (1993) — Prólogo — 63 copias
Antaeus No. 63, Autumn 1989 (1989) — Contribuidor — 15 copias
Where the Silence Rings: A Literary Companion to Mountains (2007) — Contribuidor — 11 copias
The Paris Review 32 1964 Summer-Fall (1964) — Editor — 4 copias
The Paris Review 95 1985 Spring (1985) — Editor — 2 copias
Antaeus No. 29, Spring 1978 — Contribuidor — 2 copias
Peter Matthiessen no boundaries [video recording] (2009) — Featured — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

Extravagantly geographical, symbolic, multilayered, masterful, definitely a classic. I found it tough going, but it's possible that if I'd read it in parts instead of all at once, it would have fared better. Still, I'm not fool enough to fail to recognize how good it is, nor ignore the true love of writing and craft that went into it (read about how Matthiessen got it re-written and be impressed.)
 
Denunciada
amandrake | 38 reseñas más. | Apr 17, 2024 |
I bought this book years ago, and although I've long since been aware that it's more travel/nature-writing than about wildlife, let alone the snow leopard in particular, I admit I was still hoping for more of a focus on wildlife. There's no denying that Matthiessen is an incredibly talented nature writer, and for what it is, I enjoyed reading about his travels and hiking, but I can't help feeling that the book is closer kin to books on spirituality and eastern philosophy than it is to anything related to nature and/or wildlife. I'm not sure if this is in the territory of the rest of Matthiessen's writing, but it's undeniable that I feel a touch misled and likely won't read his other works.

I'd recommend this for readers interested in personal spiritual journeys undertaken in nature and fans of nature-based travel writing, but that's about all I can say, I fear. It was fine, but it really wasn't for me.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
whitewavedarling | 52 reseñas más. | Mar 11, 2024 |
An absolute must for crane lovers and an enjoyable read for bird lovers in general. Matthiessen couples his own travels with some science and local color to make a world ranging group of birds seem immediate and the protection of said birds a vital mission of anyone reading .
For non- crane lovers, it might be a bit repetitive…go to place x in hopes of seeing crane y…learn a bit about them…then go to place y and repeat, but …all in all…a joy
 
Denunciada
cspiwak | otra reseña | Mar 6, 2024 |
The story is told as a drawn-out series of accounts of the famous shoot-out at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota in 1975, but also concerning many other related events and combined with extracts of court transcripts and of the author’s interviews. Ultimately it’s never clear why FBI agents were at the shoot-out site initially, who shot whom when, and exactly what Leonard Peltier had to do with it. Most or all prosecutorial, FBI, and presented “witness” accounts seem unreliable, and there is now knowledge of either fabricated ballistic evidence or information that was withheld about ballistic evidence. The author was clearly personally involved in this, his sympathies are immediately and everywhere clear. He brings the story to us in a protracted repetitive fashion, but the main disappointment for the reader is that almost everything is left in the air, and although it seems clear that Peltier was picked by the FBI to take the fall and then received a sham trial, it is also clear that two FBI agents were murdered (it's not self-defense when you shoot a wounded man in the head), and that Peltier is a serial felon from adolescence. An account related to the author from an unnamed and disguised Indian "X" confessing to the murders given near the end of the book didn't seem to be a more reliable account than any other.
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I have had some interest in lying in the past, and I noticed that many of the stories told on both sides are of a type commonly used when lying (see the current liar-in-chief or, especially, Mr. Putin). If I ask you if you did something, a common truthful response might be "no", but a common untruthful response is, "Why would a person like me do something like that?".
… (más)
 
Denunciada
markm2315 | 5 reseñas más. | Jul 1, 2023 |

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Obras
51
También por
18
Miembros
12,486
Popularidad
#1,879
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
219
ISBNs
384
Idiomas
11
Favorito
5

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