Where Have All the Fires Gone?
Pyne, Stephen J. 2000. Where Have All the Fires Gone? Fire Management Today, Vol 60, No. 3, Summer 2000
Full text [here]
Spark and Sprawl: A World Tour
Pyne, Stephen J. 2008. Spark and Sprawl: A World Tour. Forest History Today, Fall 2008.
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Rhymes With Chiricahua
Pyne, Stephen J. 2009. Rhymes With Chiricahua. Copyright 2009 Stephen J. Pyne
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
The Wildland/Science Interface
Pyne, Stephen J. 2009. The Wildland/Science Interface. Copyright 2009 Stephen J. Pyne
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Voice & Vision: A Guide to Writing History and Other Serious Nonfiction
Pyne, Stephen J. 2009. Voice & Vision: A Guide to Writing History and Other Serious Nonfiction. Harvard Univ. Press.
Reviewed [here]
People of the Prairie, People of the Fire
Pyne, Stephen. 2009. People of the Prairie, People of the Fire. The Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center.
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Patch Burning
Pyne, Stephen J. 2009. Patch Burning. The Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center.
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Missouri Compromise
Pyne, Stephen J. 2007. Missouri Compromise. Copyright 2007 Stephen J. Pyne.
Full text [here]
Review with selected excerpts [here]
The Wrath of Kuhn
Pyne, Stephen J. The Wrath of Kuhn: Meditations on Fire Philosophy. Informal talk presented to Association of Fire Ecology, November, 2006.
Full text [here]
Review [here]
“The Solution is Aircraft”: Aircraft and the Political Economy of Canadian Forest Fires
Pyne, Stephen J. “The Solution is Aircraft”: Aircraft and the Political Economy of Canadian Forest Fires. American Review of Canadian Studies, 2006, pp 458-477.
Stephen J. Pyne is Regents Professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University and author of 18 books and numerous essays. This essay derives from Pyne’s newest book, Awful Splendour: A Fire History of Canada.
Full text [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Burning Border
Pyne, Stephen J., Burning Border. Environmental History, 12 (Oct 2007)
Stephen J. Pyne is Regents Professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University and author of 18 books and numerous essays. This essay derives from Pyne’s newest book, Awful Splendour: A Fire History of Canada.
Full text of Burning Border [here]
Selected excerpts [here]
Awful Splendour: A Fire History of Canada
Pyne, Stephen J. Awful Splendour: A Fire History of Canada. 2007. Univ. British Columbia Press.
Review [here]
Burning Banff
Pyne, Stephen J. Burning Banff. Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and the Environment 11.2 (Summer 2004).
Full text [here]
Excerpts [here]
Blazes On The New Frontier
Pyne, Stephen J., Regents Professor, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University
This essay originally appeared in the The Washington Post, Oct. 28, 2007; Page B01
Full text [here]