“Naught interrupted the universal stillness of Nature…” wrote a
Maine farmer of life on the upper Kennebec River in 1835. Yet his idyll was
short-lived, as New England pioneers plundered the landscape, exploiting
wildlife, forests and rivers. Fortunately, as Common Lands, Common People
describes beautifully, the march of “progress” was slowed by the nascent
environmentalists of Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire standing up to big
businesses of the day. The beauty of these states today is thanks to the
pressure of these early conservationists—who were not, the author
suggests, an elitist group drawn from the upper echelons of society as some
historians contend, but the “common people” of the title. The writing is vivid
and the history thorough. The message? “Little” people can make a big
difference. Published by Harvard University Press, £23.50, ISBN
067414581X.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
The world's fastest spider tops 3.5 metres per second
2
Where, when and how to watch the 2026 solar eclipse
3
Babies are born with the neural foundations for maths
4
The weirdness of neutrinos could completely rewrite particle physics
5
We’ve uncovered a master gene that switches on human development
6
A type of fibre that stimulates GLP-1 release approved for use in food
7
Slowdown of AMOC ocean current may be gradual and reversible
8
The best new science-fiction novels published in July 2026
9
We’re not the most successful human species
10
Have scientists really made a living cell from scratch? Not quite



