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Green Empire: The St. Joe Company and the Remaking
of the Florida’s Panhandle,
by Kathryn Ziewitz and June Wiaz.
www.greenempirebook.com
See
the Reviews...
“Green
Empire is the
best environmental and corporate history book of 2004.
“It
is a solid work that exposes sunshine to the Sunshine State and is a must
read for all environmental activists and good citizens.”
-- MaximsNews.com

The
View from Florida...

June Wiaz is a freelance
investigative journalist who has worked for the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, the National Governors' Association and for the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. In addition to
co-authoring Green Empire with
Kathryn Ziewitz
(See.)
she has recently written chapters in The Book of the Everglades, and Between
Two Rivers. See her Personal Bio.
JuneWiaz@MaximsNews.com
Bio
of June Wiaz
June
grew up in the towns of West New York and
Bergenfield, New Jersey. She spent her first
few summers in an actual bungalow colony
where it was mandatory for the women to play
mah jonnhg and for the men to smoke
cigars and play poker while the kids ran
around with towels around their necks and
acting like super heroes.
This is where June first developed
her interest in environmental protection,
hunting for crawfish under rocks in the river
and falling out of trees.
Contrary
to the lives of great writers, June did not
suffer much hardship, although her dad did
suffer a massive heart attack when she was
just seven (and he 39). Her dad’s illness
taught June to master some life skills
earlier than some other kids perhaps as she
and her sister had to take on more
responsibilities.
She
still found plenty of time to play kickball
on her dead-end street and go exploring in
nearby woods with a creek that she only
recently has come to realize was 95 percent
storm water runoff. Still, it was what
passed for wilderness in northern New
Jersey.
Before
college, June spent two summers at a
National Science Foundation program at the
University of Wisconsin at Superior. She did
a project on a sanitary landfill and
concluded that seagulls were to blame for
high levels of phosphates in nearby soil and
water.
This earned her an honorable mention
in the Westinghouse science student talent
search.
June concluded they must have not had
many entrants that year.
By the time June got to college, her left and
right brains were at war and she found the
perfect program at Lehigh University to
marry her interest in environmental science
with the more creative activity of writing.
She graduated in 1981 and the following fall
went on to study Engineering and Policy at
Washington University in St. Louis.
After receiving an M.S. in 1983, June worked at a
variety of jobs in the D.C. area, including
science policy work at the American
Association for the Advancement of Science,
National Governors’ Association and the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Somewhere in the middle of all this glee she and
her husband jumped off their career ladders
and served two years in the Peace Corps in
Guatemala.
(If you ever need to know how to
build an outdoor brick oven that efficiently
burns wood, call June.)
In 1996, June moved to Tallahassee with her
husband and daughters when he accepted a job
offer here. She cried for one year straight
then came to realize that Tallahassee
actually is a rather nice place – a
cultural and largely politically progressive
island in an otherwise, um, not so cultural
and progressive part of the world.
She also came to appreciate the natural beauty of
north Florida, especially the incredible
freshwater springs that abound.
For the last nine years June has been a freelance
writer (emphasis on the first syllable of
freelance) who has written monthly columns
for the Tallahassee Democrat and various
other local publications.
She also did radio commentary for the local public
radio affiliate, but stopped after about
year as there is only so much you can say
about a radio.
She has had chapters in The Book of the
Everglades and Between Two Rivers,
and in April 2004, she and co-author and
(still!) friend Kathryn Ziewitz saw the
release of their book, Green Empire: The
Story of the St. Joe Co. in the Florida
Panhandle.
June’s writing interests include environmental
and investigative journalism as well as
humor. Attempts at humor, anyway…
JuneWiaz@MaximsNews.com

Green Empire: The St. Joe Company and the Remaking
of the Florida’s Panhandle,
by Kathryn Ziewitz and June Wiaz. [University
Press of Florida,
ISBN
0-8130-2697-0] www.greenempirebook.com
**Available
in Local Bookstores or Order from:
Powells.com
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=62-0813026970-0
Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0813026970/qid=1100451026/sr=2-1/
ref=pd_ka_b_2_1/104-8966534-1043917
“Green
Empire is the
best environmental and corporate history book of 2004.
“It
is a solid work that exposes sunshine to the Sunshine State and is a must
read for all environmental activists and good citizens.”
-- MaximsNews.com
See Reviews...