[ This book] will be an important contribution to the literature of the history of American wilderness conservation.Rupert Cutler, assistant secretary of the Department of Agriculture during the Carter Administration W.D. Frank capably demonstrates how LGBTQ history is created not just within urban settings where public institutions are often challenged by those who are out, but also in more rural environments where the passion of those pursuing their gender identities and love may find them closely connected to stewardship of the land itself. By detailing the story of the long friendship between Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas and Kay Kershaw, the gender-defying female spinster who operated a famed Cascade Mountains dude ranch, Frank explores two overarching issues that continue to be controversial today: preserving wilderness land to protect marginalized spaces of openness and preserving the right to privacy to protect safe places for personal sexual identity and expression. Frank constructs an impressive regional history of the bond that Justice William O. Douglas and Kay Kershaw, along with her fellow spinster lovers, Pat Kane and Isabelle Lynn, formed to fight for the right to enjoy wilderness in the Cascade range as well as the right to private lives for all Americansthe Constitutional concept underlying LGBTQ rights now under attack by certain members of the present Supreme Court. To weave these three stories together required a great deal of research. Franks is nothing short of encyclopedic, drawing on interviews, newspaper articles, government documents, photographs, and both public and private collections of letters. He tells us a great deal not only about the spinsters and the justice, but also about the eastern Cascade Mountain range, the conflicting needs of agriculture in eastern Washington, sexism in early womens athletics and in early aviation (Kershaw was a famed local athlete, outdoors adventurer and early 20th century pilot), the McCarthy era crackdown on homosexuality, the politics of trading land to secure wilderness areas in the Cascades, Douglass penumbra Constitutional theory protecting privacy rightsits all here for those interested in the evolution of womens rights, LGBTQ rights, wilderness advocacy, and the biographies of a Supreme Court justice and three spinsters who loved one another and the land around them.Gary L. Atkins, author of Gay Seattle: Stories of Exile and Belonging Quite an engaging work. ...a most fascinating deeply engaging exploration of homosexuality/lesbianismnot to mention far deeper understandings and tales about Yakima/East-side sociology/politics than Ive ever seen beforewhich cause it, the whole book in my opinionto be one of the most absorbing pieces of writing on the subject(s) I've ever seen. ...a wonderfully detailed mental journey into not only some pretty remarkable ecowarriors' hearts and souls, but alsojust as impressiveone of the best, in-depth and so thoroughly researched, sociodemographic explorations into the political dimensions of being a conservationist in one of the most conservative parts of the whole Northwest.Brock Evans, director of the Sierra Club Washington, DC office, 1973-1981