Trailblazing marine biologist, visionary conservationist, deep ecology philosopher, Edward F. Ricketts (1897–1948) has reached legendary status in the California mythos. A true polymath and a thinker ahead of his time, Ricketts was a scientist who worked in passionate collaboration with many of his friends—artists, writers, and influential intellectual figures—including, perhaps most famously, John Steinbeck, who once said that Ricketts’s mind ‘had no horizons.’ This unprecedented collection, featuring previously unpublished pieces as well as others available for the first time in their original form, reflects the wide scope of Ricketts’s scientific, philosophical, and literary interests during the years he lived and worked on Cannery Row in Monterey, California. These writings, which together illuminate the evolution of Ricketts’s unique, holistic approach to science, include ‘Verbatim transcription of notes on the Gulf of California trip, ‘ the basic manuscript for Steinbeck’s and Ricketts’s
Log from the Sea of Cortez; the essays ‘The Philosophy of Breaking Through’ and ‘A Spiritual Morphology of Poetry;’ several shorter pieces on topics including collecting invertebrates and the impact of modernization on Mexican village life; and more. An engaging critical biography and a number of rare photographs offer a new and richly detailed view of Ricketts’s life.
Table of Content
Acknowledgments
Foreword
Editor’s Note
Introduction
1. Foreword to the 1925 Pacific Biological Laboratories Catalog
2. ‘Zoological Introduction’ to
Between Pacific Tides
3. The Philosophy of ‘Breaking Through’
4. A Spiritual Morphology of Poetry
5. Essay on Non-teleological Thinking
6. Verbatim Transcription of Notes of Gulf of California Trip
7. Thesis and Materials for a Script on Mexico
8. ‘Outline and Conspectus’ for a Book on the Mandated Islands
9. Transcript of Summer 1945 and 1946 Notes Based on Trips to the Outer Shores
10. Investigator Blames Industry, Nature for Shortage
Epilogue
Living at the Lab with My Father
Memoir by Ed Ricketts Jr.
Early Days: Nicknames and Such
Memoir by Nancy Ricketts
Works Cited
Index
About the author
Edward F. Ricketts co-authored several books, among them Between Pacific Tides (1939), now in its fifth, revised edition and still regarded as the definitive ecological handbook on the California littoral. Katharine A. Rodger is editor of Renaissance Man of Cannery Row: The Life and Letters of Edward F. Ricketts (2002). Susan F. Beegel, editor of The Hemingway Review, coedited Steinbeck and the Environment (1997).