Fred Strebeigh

www.Strebeigh.com
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Some articles by Fred Strebeigh:

Defending Russian Wilderness

In the Nation That Holds One-Eighth the Habitable Globe, Love of Nature Is Reaching the Peaks of Power 

 

Originally published in EnvironmentYale, fall 2010

 

 Русская версия (Russian version)

 

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Where Nature Reigns
Russia’s underfunded yet vast ecological reserves are rich with brown bears, wild honey--and rare humanity.
 
 
Originally published in
Sierra
, March-April 2002
 
 
 

Originally published in Bicycling, April 1991
 
 . . . She appeared at my right shoulder, her face inches from mine.  We were cycling together, though I had never seen her before.  We rode side-by-side through the city of Beijing, and around us streamed thousands of bicycles with red banners flying.  Beijing was in revolt.  And as we rode together we broke the law.
 
 
 Originally published in Audubon, November 1988
 
Dispatched to London over "rocky hollow lanes" two centuries ago, the Reverend Mr. White's observations would change forever the way that people wrote, thought, and looked upon the natural world.
 
 
Originally published in New York Times Magazine, October 6, 1991
 

This article for the New York Times Magazine began my reporting for Equal: Women Reshape American Law (W. W. Norton, 2009).  I tell part of the story of its origin in the acknowledgments section of the book (excerpted in the acknowledgments section of www.EqualWomen.com).  -- Fred Strebeigh

 
 
 

More articles:
(See column at upper left on this page, and more articles will be posted in future.)
 


Fred Strebeigh teaches writing at Yale in the Department of
English and the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.  He has written for publications including Atlantic Monthly, Audubon, New Republic, Reader's Digest, Smithsonian, and the New York Times Magazine.