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Every river looks simple at a distance: a blue line on a map, a brief blur beneath a bridge. Up close, each bend turns out to be crowded with stories of struggle, ingenuity and care. This book walks the length of great waterways alongside paddlers, hydrologists, Indigenous guardians and ferrymen, tracing a layered river history that most atlases ignore.
Chapter by chapter, it shows how flood forecasters, levee sceptics and delta pilots quietly changed the way societies understand hydrology and society. Their work reshaped flood maps, dam plans and legal language around rights of rivers, often long before those phrases made headlines. Along the way, readers see how environmental justice rivers campaigns, indigenous water guardians and sharp-eyed river rangers challenge old assumptions about who gets to speak for the water.
For readers of narrative environmental non-fiction, policy debates and travel writing, this is a source-to-sea journey through water governance in practice. It brings to life source to sea journeys that connect shrinking glaciers to sinking deltas, and floodplain management decisions to everyday lives on the banks. By the end, you will see your own local channel differently: not as scenery, but as a living system whose future depends on the choices we make about river conservation book priorities and climate change rivers realities today.

River Bones

SKU: 9789375364689
$25.99 Regular Price
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  • Clara Von Mirelle writes narrative non-fiction at the meeting point of water, politics and lived experience. Her work follows the people who measure, navigate and argue over landscapes that most of us glimpse only from a bridge window. Rather than centring grand projects or famous leaders, she is drawn to the quiet specialists and local guardians whose decisions slowly reshape maps, laws and habits. Across her writing, Clara weaves environmental history, legal nuance and sensory detail into stories that stay close to the ground, or in this case, the riverbank. She is particularly interested in how Indigenous law, scientific models and everyday river work collide and sometimes cooperate. A recurring thread in her work is the way rivers have served as both trade routes and spiritual corridors, carrying ideas as surely as sediment. Her aim is simple: to help readers see familiar waterways as complicated relationships rather than background scenery, and to recognise the human labour required to keep them alive.

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