A longtime backpacker, climber, and skier, Michael Lanza knows our national parks like the back of his hand. As a father, he hopes to share these special places with his two young children. But
he has seen firsthand the changes wrought by the warming climate and understands what lies ahead: Alaska's tidewater glaciers are rapidly retreating, and the abundant sea life in their shadow
departs with them. Encroaching tides threaten beloved wilderness coasts like Washington's Olympic and Florida's Everglades. Less snowfall and hotter summers will diminish Yosemite's
world-famous waterfalls. And it is predicted that Glacier National Park's 7,000-year-old glaciers will be gone in a decade.
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To Lanza, it feels like the house he grew up in is being looted. Painfully aware of the ecological��nd spiritual��alamity that global warming will bring to our nation's parks, Lanza sets out to
show his children these wonders before they have changed forever.
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He takes his nine-year-old son, Nate, and seven-year-old daughter, Alex, on an ambitious journey to see as many climate-threatened wild places as he can fit into a year: backpacking in the
Grand Canyon, Glacier, the North Cascades, Mount Rainier, Rocky Mountain, and along the wild Olympic coast; sea kayaking in Alaska's Glacier Bay; hiking to Yosemite's waterfalls; rock climbing
in Joshua Tree National Park; cross-country skiing in Yellowstone; and canoeing in the Everglades.
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Through these poignant and humorous adventures, Lanza shares the beauty of each place and shows how his children connect with nature when given ��nscripted��time. Ultimately, he writes, this is
more their story than his, for whatever comes of our changing world, they are the ones who will live in it.