cover image One Square Inch of Silence: One Man's Search for Natural Silence in a Noisy World [With CD (Audio)]

One Square Inch of Silence: One Man's Search for Natural Silence in a Noisy World [With CD (Audio)]

Gordon Hempton, John Grossmann. Free Press, $26 (356pp) ISBN 978-1-4165-5908-5

Though many Americans may think their country abounds in places free from human interference, acoustic ecologist and professional sound recordist Hempton readily proves otherwise. Armed with sound monitoring equipment and a well-defined goal-to find a spot that has ""no audible human noise intrusions of any kind for a minimum of 15 minutes""-Hempton drives his VW bus from Seattle to Washington, D.C., visiting national parks and other anticipated sources of silence. Along the way, he contemplates the intricacies of his vehicle, the decline in songbird populations and the effects of noise stress in hospitals, while filling readers in on the basics of audio science. From rural Montana, and what may be the nation's quietest town, to his final hike through the C&O canal, beneath Ronald Reagan National air traffic, Hempton's travelogue is filled with absorbing descriptions of the nation's natural treasures, inviting readers to consider the effects of rare silence against chronic noise, and the difference a single law, to ""prohibit all aircraft from flying over our most pristine national parks,"" could make: ""If a loud noise... can affect many square miles, then a natural place, if maintained in a 100 percent noise-free condition, will likewise affect many square miles around it."".