Jack Davis
"Retracing the sauntering travels of one of the country’s most interesting historical figures, Dan Chapman takes readers on a journey through the natural wonderland of the American South. The journey is sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes uplifting, and always edifying."
Community Ecology
This book will be of general interest to anyone interested in environmental issues in the Southeast US…. I found A Road Running Southward to be an accessible, informative, and useful examination of landscapes in the Southeast US that John Muir would no longer recognize.”
The New York Times
"Not all journeys in somebody else’s footsteps prove especially comforting. In A Road Running Southward: Following John Muir’s Journey Through an Endangered Land, the Georgia journalist Dan Chapman retraces the ecologist John Muir’s thousand-mile walk through the Reconstruction-era South, and what he finds there today is alarming.."
The Atlanta Journal Constitution
"Dan Chapman balances grave outlook with wry humor in new book...an engaging hybrid part lyrical travelogue, part investigative journalism and part jeremiad, all shot through with droll humor....[with an] immersive, sometimes mischievous approach....His easy enthusiasm is infectious enough to make ardent tree huggers of us all."
Conservation Biology
Chapman uses his keen observation and a deep sense of place to describe the challenges the unique ecosystems of the South face…. This book will be of interest to students of natural history, environmentalists, town planners, and those interested in environmental conservation in North America.”
Booklist
"Chapman offers a lucid feature-story narrative with a splash of gonzo…. Chapman may be following Muir’s footprints, but as a work of environmental consciousness-raising, this book’s true inspiration may be Rachel Carson."
Bill McKibben
"John Muir’s long walk to the Gulf was a crucible of environmental thinking on Planet Earthit is where he began to posit that perhaps man was not at the center of all. As Dan Chapman makes clear, it’s an idea still struggling to be heardespecially, perhaps, in the American South where it was first formed."
Natural Resources and Environment
Reading Chapman’s book is similar to sitting atop a metaphorical fire tower because it provides a panoramic view of the ecological challenges in the Southeastfrom river pollution to invasive species. It also provides insight into Muir’s legacy…. the book is a tour de force.”
The Post and Courier
"A Road Running Southward revisits Muir’s 1867 trip from Louisville, Ky., to Cedar Key, Fla., and provides an important, sweeping update of the environmental situation in this part of the world…. It is the kind of book that, one can hope, will radicalize the next generation of environmentalists."
Melissa Fay Greene
"Dan Chapman’s new book is a celebration of America’s nineteenth-century Southern wilderness, and a wake-up call for the beloved, yet endangered, region today. Chapman guides us through a long-ago dazzling, buzzing, glittering world of forests, meadows, rivers, and marshesdangerously diminished today by urban sprawl and heedless development, but not yet completely vanished from the earth."
The Wall Street Journal
"[A Road Running Southward alternates] between jeremiad and dark satire...[where] walking, for Mr. Chapman, is a form of activism as well as personal penance, a way of making himself see, and feel, the drastic changes in a lacerated landscape he still loves."
ArtsATL
"Part-love letter to the natural world, the travelogue is primarily an environmental cri de coeur about the ecological devastation wrought by global warming and the misuse of dwindling resources."