Hailey (architecture, U. of Florida) looks at islands created by soil and rock from dredged channels, ports, and cuts along the east coast of the US. His main interest is how the islands came about and how people have used them, though he also discusses wildlife and plants. He covers building New York Harbor's islands of waste, rip-rap, U Thant's East River island, mound, the common wilderness of Indian River's linear archipelago, nettle, Peanut Island's mutinous landscapes camp, development Biscayne Bay's lagoon, spit, surrounding Biscayne Bay's spoil islands, sand, Key West's western margin, and barge. * Book News, Inc. * Its exciting to see a book on the array of intentionally incidental landmasses that line our channels and dot our harbors. Focusing mainly on Floridathat most constructed and tenuous stateCharlie Haileys detailed histories of a few selected sites assert that the things we make without much thought give us a lot to think about. -- Matt Coolidge, Center for Land Use Interpretation Spoil Island is almost magical, as is the place of which it speakssurreal, free, and maddeningly difficult, spoil islands offer a range of experiences like nowhere else. To say that this a compelling tale of a landscape undergoing the transition from industrial channel dredging to recreational uses or a striking illustration of self-organization in the complex dance of linked human-natural events would only hint at its accomplishments. In this work, Charlie Hailey not only continues his imaginative presentations of interesting places, but without exaggeration enters the company of Ivan Doig and Barry Lopez. The wonderful writing weaves together vivid first-hand experiences, historical narrative, and biographical threads, from which emerge a site in the Gulf of Mexico that, as Melville says, is not drawn on any map, true places never are. -- Robert Mugerauer, University of Washington Spoil Island serves as a clear contribution to the study of religion and ecology, questioning the ontology of natural ecosystems among other things; it makes contributions to aesthetics, through the various excursions made into art forms; finally it has a lot to say on sacred place and journey. -- Kip Redick, Christopher Newport University