White Mountain Guide

White Mountain Guide

Author: Steven D. Smith

Publisher: Appalachian Mountain Club

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 656

ISBN-13: 9781934028445

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This fully updated, comprehensive hiking guide is the most trusted resource available for hiking trails in the White Mountain National Forest. Includes three high-quality, GPS-rendered, pull-out maps.


Waterfalls of the White Mountains

Waterfalls of the White Mountains

Author: Bruce R. Bolnick

Publisher: Countryman Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 310

ISBN-13: 9780881504644

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This guide to over 100 waterfalls in the White Mountains of New Hampshire tells the best times of year and vantage points from which to view them, and also gives suggestions for further hikes, swimming holes, and uncrowded picnic spots.


Hiking the White Mountains

Hiking the White Mountains

Author: Lisa Ballard

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2010-06-01

Total Pages: 211

ISBN-13: 0762763051

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See Hiking the White Mountains, Second Edition for all the most updated hike info! Whether you're taking in a 360-degree view mountaintop view, a dramatic waterfall, or a pristine pond, this book takes readers on thirty-nine of the best hikes in New Hampshire's White Mountains, some well-known and others off the beaten path.


This Vast Book of Nature

This Vast Book of Nature

Author: Pavel Cenkl

Publisher: University of Iowa Press

Published: 2009-11

Total Pages: 209

ISBN-13: 1587297140

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This Vast Book of Nature is a careful, engaging, accessible, and wide-ranging account of the ways in which the White Mountains of northern New Hampshire---and, by implication, other wild places---have been written into being by different visitors, residents, and developers from the post-Revolutionary era to the days of high tourism at the beginning of the twentieth century. Drawing on tourist brochures, travel accounts, pictorial representations, fiction and poetry, local histories, journals, and newspapers, Pavel Cenkl gauges how Americans have arranged space for political and economic purposes and identified it as having value beyond the economic. Starting with an exploration of Jeremy Belknap’s 1784 expedition to Mount Washington, which Cenkl links to the origins of tourism in the White Mountains, to the transformation of touristic and residential relationships to landscape, This Vast Book of Nature explores the ways competing visions of the landscape have transformed the White Mountains culturally and physically, through settlement, development, and---most recently---preservation, a process that continues today.