Oregon State University Press
For fifty years, Oregon State University Press has been publishing exceptional books about the Pacific Northwest—its people and landscapes, its flora and fauna, its history and cultural heritage. The Press has played a vital role in the region’s literary life, providing readers with a better understanding of what it means to be an Oregonian. Today, Oregon State University Press publishes distinguished books in several academic areas from environmental history and natural resource management to indigenous studies.
A Week in Yellowstone's Thorofare
A Journey Through the Remotest Place
A Naturalist's Guide to the Hidden World of Pacific Northwest Dunes
Rivers of Oregon
Rivers of Oregon captures the beauty and the intrinsic qualities of the state’s irresistible riverscapes like no other book has done. From the underwater view and from the refuge of riparian forests, from the seat of a canoe or raft and from distant mountain summits, readers will gain new perspectives on the extraordinary features that provide us with water, with life, and with scenes whose loss would leave us deeply impoverished.
The Jewish Oregon Story, 1950-2010
Published in Cooperation with the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education
Where the Wind Dreams of Staying
Searching for Purpose and Place in the West
Through a Green Lens
Fifty Years of Writing for Nature
A Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Oregon
Hiking from Portland to the Coast
An Interpretive Guide to 30 Trails
Leaded
The Poisoning of Idaho's Silver Valley
Keeping Oregon Green
Livability, Stewardship, and the Challenges of Growth, 1960–1980
Keeping Oregon Green is a new history of the signature accomplishments of Oregon’s environmental era: the revitalization of the polluted Willamette River, the Beach Bill that preserved public access to the entire coastline, the Bottle Bill that set the national standard for reducing roadside litter, and the nation’s first comprehensive land use zoning law. Drawing on extensive archival research, source materials ranging from poetry to congressional hearings, and firmly rooted in the cultural, economic, and political history of the Pacific Northwest, Keeping Oregon Green argues that the state’s environmental legacy is not just the product of visionary leadership, but rather a complex confluence of events, trends, and personalities that could only have happened when and where it did.
Science Without Frontiers
Cosmopolitanism and National Interests in the World of Learning, 1870–1940
On the Ragged Edge of Medicine
Doctoring Among the Dispossessed
Accidental Gravity
Residents, Travelers, and the Landscape of Memory
The Long Shadows
A Global Environmental History of the Second World War
Kanaka Hawai'i Cartography
Hula, Navigation, and Oratory
My Life, by Louis Kenoyer
Reminiscences of a Grand Ronde Reservation Childhood
New Strategies for Wicked Problems
Science and Solutions in the 21st Century
Legends of the Northern Paiute
as told by Wilson Wewa
Grass Roots
A History of Cannabis in the American West
Eleanor Baldwin and the Woman's Point of View
New Thought Radicalism in Portland’s Progressive Era
Legible Sovereignties
Rhetoric, Representations, and Native American Museums
Dangerous Subjects
James D. Saules and the Rise of Black Exclusion in Oregon
Native Space
Geographic Strategies to Unsettle Settler Colonialism
A Primer for Computational Biology
Undercurrents
From Oceanographer to University President
Speaking for the River
Confronting Pollution on the Willamette, 1920s-1970s
Homing Instincts
Homing Instincts is a collection of personal essays that explores the ways we define “home” at different stages of our lives. Based on pivotal moments in the author’s life in New York City and Oregon, Homing Instincts bridges the gap between where we are and the stories we tell ourselves about where we think we belong.