Luminaries Watershed Edition: Caitlin Scarano with Lynda Mapes
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Welcome to the first episode of a special four-part edition of our Luminaries series that focuses on creative work about watersheds. This special edition has been curated by Caitlin Scarano, a recipient of the 2024-25 Public Humanities Collaboratory Watershed Fellowship.
Caitlin is a writer and poet whose current project explores cultural, political, and ecological interrelationships within the Skagit River watershed, from the dams of its upper reaches out to the Salish Sea. During this four-part series, she interviews four writers and artists whose work on watersheds are luminaries for her.
Today, Caitlin speaks with author and longtime environmental journalist, Lynda Mapes. Over the course of her 27-year career as a reporter at the Seattle Times, and as the author of seven books, Lynda has earned numerous awards, including the Kavli Gold Award for Science Journalism from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a National Outdoor Book Award, and the Washington State Book Award for nonfiction.
In her work, Lynda centers connections between people and the natural world. Following a confluence of storylines about one of the largest dam removal projects in the world on the Elwha River, Lynda connected deeply with this watershed and the people who care about it. Caitlin talks with Lynda about her reporting and writing, and the ethic of relationality behind them, that led to the book Elwha: A River Reborn.
"Luminaries" is produced by the Spring Creek Project at Oregon State University. This series invites people to share stories about writing and art that illuminates their environmental thinking or work.