By Eric Freedman, Capital News Service
LANSINGโLooking for a holiday gift for a reader who loves the Great Lakes?
Here are five prospects to considerโand what our reporters learned from interviewing their authors this year:
When you think about the culture of Michiganโs Upper Peninsula, pasties, fishing, hunting and deep, deep snow immediately come to mind.
But author Candice Goucher hones in on another cultural aspectโthe picnicโin โPicnics and Porcupines: Eating in the Wilderness of Michiganโs Upper Peninsulaโ (Wayne State University Press ($26.99).
The book covers topics from Indigenous peopleโs summer gatherings for the wild rice harvest that brought families together in outdoor camps to immigrant communities that brought their own picnic traditions which evolved in response to the local environment.
For example, Goucher told reporter Isabella Figueroa Nogueira how UP railroads opened their iron ore trains to passengers on Sundays. โThese trains would stop and people would pay a small amount of money to get on them and be taken to a picnic ground where they could join others and enjoy the afternoon.โ
In โDead Moose on Isle Royale: Off Trail with the Citizen Scientists of the Wolf-Moose Projectโ (Michigan State University Press, $24.95) a veteran volunteer at Isle Royale National Park explains the passion of the people who sustain one of ecologyโs longest-running studies. Theyโre the ones who find and photograph moose carcasses and haul them back to the researchers for scientific analysis.
Author Jeffrey Holden recalled to Figueroa how he joined up because โI was willing to literally dig in and get my hands dirty.โ
The book evolved from a journal he kept, Holden said. โI was writing for non-scientist people, and I wanted it to be kind of informal and conversational, so itโs not a technical sort of text.โ
Thereโs been a long-running debate about whether cougars live in Michigan or whether reported sightings are misidentifications, wishful thinking or hoaxes. Author Aaron Veselenak is a true believer in their presence.
He explains why in โSilent Springs the Panther: Historic Accounts of Michigan Big Cat Attacksโ (Mission Point Press, $17.95), a book that combines his love for cougars with stories of encounters drawn from newspapers and historical documents.
Wildlife officials have since confirmed there are cougars in the state but say they likely were passing through from elsewhere. They say thereโs no growing, native population in the state.
In defense of cougars, Veselenak told reporter Anna Barnes, โI think the large majority of people can read this book and conclude that just because itโs an animal that occasionallyโbut very rarelyโharms people, it is worthy of our love, our respect and our protection.โ
โHorse-drawn carriages clatter down car-free streets. The mouth-watering smell of fudge wafts from quaint storefronts,โ Figueroa wrote. โFerries glide across the Straits of Mackinac, carrying visitors to Michiganโs most famous โ and most charming โ tourist destination.โ
Wonder how a onetime strategic but remote military base and later a fishing village became home to the elegant Grand Hotel and an annual Lilac Festival? Author Frank Boles relates the story in โVisiting Mackinac, 150 Years of Tourism at Michiganโs Fabled Straitsโ (Michigan State University Press, $37.95).
โIt may be beautiful but tourist sites are made by people. And people have different ideas. Tourism is not necessarily about promoting beauty,โ Boles said. โItโs about the people who are doing it as an industry, making money,โ
โShelter and Storm: A Home in the Driftlessโ (University of Minnesota Press, $19,95) is a collection of essays that draw on experiences of survivors who rebuilt their communities after a devastating 2018 flood in Southwest Wisconsinโs Driftless Area, a region that evaded the glaciers that carved the Great Lakes in the last Ice Age.
Author Tamara Dean and her friends launched the project for people to talk about their experiences, what they had lost, whom they had saved, who had helped them and what they had learned.
Dean told reporter Clara Lincolnhol that she hopes the book inspires enthusiasm and curiosity about her life in the Driftless, such things as blue-glowing fireflies, the wisdom of prairie fires and the silver-linings of tornadoes.



















