Reddit Reddit reviews The Control of Nature

We found 12 Reddit comments about The Control of Nature. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Control of Nature
The Control of Nature
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12 Reddit comments about The Control of Nature:

u/nibot · 18 pointsr/Louisiana

One of the main things to do in Baton Rouge is to eat delicious food.

  • Enjoy exploring Louisiana Creole cuisine (surprisingly great Wikipedia article!) and Cajun cuisine. Two favorites: blackened redfish, and bread pudding.
  • Eat the incredible seafood poboy (get it with sprouts, and hashbrowns on the side; apply tabasco liberally) at Louie's by LSU (open 24hrs, usually--closed sunday nights?).
  • Be awed by the epic summertime thunderstorms that roll through almost every day around 2pm.
  • Visit the observation deck at the top of the state capitol. It's open till 4pm. Prepare for your visit by reading All The King's Men by Robert Penn Warren (or watch either of the films--the 1949 film won best picture, and the 2006 re-make was filmed locally), a fictionalization of the rise and fall of Huey Long. Pick up a copy of the book at Cottonwood Books.
  • Visit the Louisiana State Museum (by spanish town and the capitol; free).
  • Try to get a tour of the ExxonMobil refinery.
  • Two local obsessions: Raising Canes chicken fingers and LSU Football.
  • Eat pizza at Capitol Grocery in Spanish Town, at 5pm (except Sunday). Sit outside and listen to some locals telling stories. Wander around Spanish Town and Arsenal Park.
  • Run/bike/drive around the LSU lakes. Gawk at the amazing houses.
  • Visit Mike the Tiger at LSU. While you're there, check out the special exhibitions at the LSU library.
  • Eat delicious food at George's restaurant, an incredible dive bar under I-10. Favorites are the burgers (the 'heavy hitter' with avocado), the pastrami and swiss on rye, the ribeye sandwich. Legendary for their shrimp poboys, though I have never had one. Leave a dollar on the tar-encrusted ceiling.
  • Play tennis or golf at City Park or visit the dog park
  • See the crazy snake collection at Bluebonnet Swamp nature center
  • Drink beers, eat red beans and rice, boudin balls, and hushpuppies at the Chimes by LSU. Tin roof amber is a great local beer (it's not on the menu, but they have it!). If it's your first time, start out with an Abita Amber and a fried alligator appetizer.
  • Admittedly it isn't Cafe du Monde, and, after being razed by Walmart, the neighborhood ain't what it used to be, but you can still get your beignet fix at Coffee Call.
  • Visit the new Tin Roof brewery (friday afternoons only) and enjoy free samples.
  • See a show and get dinner at Chelsea's, also in the I-10 overpass area. One favorite is the grilled cheese on foccacia; goes well with a blue moon.
  • Drink coffee at PerksGarden District Coffee (on Perkins Rd) or Highland Coffee (by LSU; always full of lots of studying students).
  • Get a plate lunch at Zeeland Street Market (by Perks). Get the lunch special. On Wednesdays they have the best fried chicken in town. On Fridays get the fried catfish with mac and cheese on the side. Best time to arrive is just before the 12:00 noon crowds. Closed Sunday.
  • Take a date to lunch at Yvette Marie's, a cute low-key restaurant in an antique store. I like the jalapeno chicken sandwich. If you're looking for something more traditional, you can't go wrong with their muffuletta sandwich.
  • Ride in the monthly Critical Mass bike ride with approximately 200 other cyclists through the streets of the city. Last friday of every month, 6:30pm, LSU parade ground/clocktower. See also the bicycle events calendar.
  • Go on a swamp tour with Marcus de la Houssaye (Lake Martin/Breaux Bridge), Ernest Couret (Butte La Rose), or Dean Wilson (Bayou Sorrel- afterwards, take the Plaquemine-Sunshine ferry across the river and eat lunch at Roberto's River Road Restaurant)
  • Read Cherry Baton Rouge to hear about this week's goings-on.
  • Listen to 91.1 KLSU (college radio station) and 89.3 WRKF (NPR affiliate).
  • Find the river road ruins south of LSU.
  • On the first friday of the month, go to Stabbed in the Art.
  • Some other restaurants to look up: Parrain's Seafood; Juban's; Roberto's River Road Restaurant (Sunshine, LA)
  • The Old State Capitol is beautiful, historic, and free to visit. On the river at North Blvd (by the Shaw Center).
  • Stroll on the levee and watch the ships (barges) go by.
  • If you are a civil engineering / geology nerd, you will enjoy reading John McPhee's book The Control of Nature (or read it online) which details the century-long but almost-certainly-doomed effort to control the Mississippi river. If this stuff interests you, drive up and visit the Morganza Spillway and Old River Control, about 1 hour drive north from Baton Rouge (maybe a bit shorter now due to the new Audubon Bridge). There is also the Bonnet Carré Spillway on the way to New Orleans. (Morganza is also the location of the "cafe scene" from Easy Rider; visit The Bear (bar) for some memorabilia.) Check out this beautiful overlay of some old geological maps showing the past courses of the Mississippi river onto Google Maps. Roadside Geology of Louisiana is good too.
  • The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory is about 30 miles east and offers public tours on some fridays and saturdays. Contact them in advance. CAMD operates a synchrotron light source in town (across from Whole Foods); you might be able to get a tour there too.
  • Get a group of friends together, bring a cooler full of beer, and go Tiki Tubing down the Amite River. If Tiki Tubing isn't quite your style, rent a kayak at the Backpacker and take it out on some local river or bayou. They have equipment that will let you carry a kayak on just about any vehicle.
  • Head out to Zydeco Breakfast at Cafe des Amis in Breaux Bridge (1 hr drive west) early Saturday morning (8am). Or the cajun/zydeco dance at Whiskey River Landing Sundays at 4pm, or their neighbor McGee's Landing Sundays at noon (also: airboat rides). Listen to KRVS 88.7 FM on the way over.
  • Tour Laura Plantation and stroll the grounds of Oak Alley Plantation. I've heard Laura Plantation has a much better, more historically-informed tour; skip the tour at Oak Alley and go directly for the mint juleps.
  • Abita brewery, about 1.5 hours east, has free tours
  • Feed the giraffes at Global Wildlife (near Hammond)
  • Get an airplane flying lesson at Fly By Knight (Hammond)
  • Go to Tsunami on the roof of the Shaw Center (art museum) for the best view of the river (thanks BiscuitCrisps). Great place for a drink! Also, check whether any events are going on at the Shaw Center or the co-located Manship Theatre. They often have interesting shows and films.
  • The Cove has this city's best selection of whiskey (thanks malakhgabriel).
u/remembertosmilebot · 12 pointsr/MapPorn

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u/RatLungworm · 11 pointsr/MapPorn

I would prefer the relevant New Yorker article by John McPhee. You can still buy the book.

u/mustafabot · 6 pointsr/GlobalOffensive

I'm not home yet but I did some googling and found it - it's called "The Control of Nature" by John McPhee. It's a little dated now I suppose but the stories are still interesting and applicable.

u/metastable2 · 4 pointsr/geology

Being a person who has taught many university geology courses, I would say that in general geology textbooks are really boring (in my opinion). I think there are some good non-fiction books our there about geology that may be more interesting. Some suggestions:

  1. If you live in the US, see if there is a "Roadside Geology of <your state>" book. These books are pretty good, and relevant to where you live.

  2. "Thin Ice" by Bowen, all about climate and ice cores. Lots of good climbing stories.

  3. Books by people like John McPhee, such as "The Control of Nature"
u/Difficat · 4 pointsr/HPMOR

In the interest of trying to recommend books you may not have read, I am suggesting some that may seem far afield from books like HPMOR. But I have read each of them multiple times and loved them, and all of them gave me a lot to think about.

I just created a comment for Chapter 85 recommending Between Silk and Cyanide by Leo Marks. It is non-fiction, a painfully honest autobiography, and not very similar except for the bits about Knut Haukelid, but it is an amazing book. The author was the head of codes for SOE during WWII and so the book is about cryptography and secrets. And courage. I'm reading it for the third time right now.

Tuf Voyaging is a collection of short stories by George R. R. Martin (no one named Stark is in it), about Haviland Tuf, a misanthropic cat-loving merchant who starts with his humble ship "Cornucopia of Excellent Goods at Low Prices" and ends up with terrifying power and some hard decisions to make about how to use it. I'd call it comedy because it is hilarious, but it is also brilliantly-written horror.

Memoirs Found in a Bathtub is a tiny surreal book by Stanislaw Lem, about a journal uncovered by a post-apolcalyptic civilization. The main character has no name, and is apparently a spy on a mission so secret even he doesn't know about it. It is nightmarish, has absolutely no rationality to it at all, is clever and unlike any other book I've read, and most people haven't heard of it.

The Control of Nature by John McPhee is another non-fiction book. I recommend it for the beauty of the language, the depth of the research, and the fact that it is incredibly fascinating and impossible to put down. McPhee makes every person he meets into someone you want to know, and his science has substance without ever losing that sense of wonder.

u/SKlalaluu · 4 pointsr/geology

[The Control of Nature by John McPhee] (https://www.amazon.com/Control-Nature-John-McPhee/dp/0374522596?ie=UTF8&ref_=asap_bc). Read it in Intro to Geology class. We had to write a paper about which location we'd rather live in and why. I chose Iceland. Read it and see if you can figure out why!

u/pomester · 3 pointsr/todayilearned

John McPhee wrote on this in his book 'Control of Nature' - the story of the lower Mississippi takes up about a third of the book with southern California mudslide control another third, and the last a story about protecting an Icelandic town from a lava flow -

A fascinating read...

u/CupBeEmpty · 2 pointsr/MapPorn

Control of Nature by John McPhee has a great chapter on that project specifically as well as all of the levees and other river control schemes that take place on the Mississippi. It is a fascinating read.

u/accousticabberation · 1 pointr/BreakingParents

Thanks! I just wish I could say there were more good things on the list.

And thanks for the Patton recommendation, I'll check that out.

I do recommend anything by John McPhee in the strongest possible terms. It's all non-fiction, and always interesting and often very funny, and about a tremendous range of topics.

Like fishing? Read The Founding Fish, which is all about the American Shad, and I mentioned before.

Like boats? Looking For a Ship is about the merchant marine.

Planes, trains, and automobiles (and more boats)? Uncommon Carriers deals with all of them, and why almost all lobster eaten in the US comes from Kentucky.

Care for tales about why New Orleans is doomed, pissing on lava , and debris flows in LA? The Control of Nature covers those.

Fruit? How about Oranges?

Geology? The Annals of the Former World is a compilation of several shorter books more or less following I-80 across the US.

Sports? Tennis (and basketball to a lesser extent). He's also written about lacrosse in various magazines.

...And a ton of other stuff, ranging from bears to farmers markets to nuclear energy to lifting body airplanes to Switzerland.

u/eugenesbluegenes · 1 pointr/AskReddit

Read something by John McPhee. I would highly recommend The Control Of Nature, especially if you have any interest in civil engineering.