Acknowledgments
   Let me begin this expression of acknowledgment—and to conclude Last Stand—by sharing an observation once made by Ernest Hemingway long ago: “If a writer knows enough about what he is writing about, he may omit things that he knows. The dignity of movement of an iceberg is due to only one ninth of it being above water.”
   Yes, the essence of many things resides in what was previously unseen. The challenge always is to illuminate the surface while revealing what lies below or is hidden in shadow. As any writer knows, we write to understand, to try and compile a complete picture of our subjects to minimize any potential blind spots and eliminate surprises. Revelation comes from distilling down everything that you know and absorb into the elements that you believe are essential.
   I am grateful to Ted Turner for opening himself up. We discussed a multitude of aspects to his life that are not in this book. He gave me unconditional, unlimited access, knowing up front that my intent was neither to write a hagiography nor to produce a shameless, tabloidy “tell-all.” This book is instead about one man’s exploration of big ideas and the motivations behind them.
   Many, many people were generous in providing insights into Turner and his idiosyncrasies. I cannot possibly name every individual here, though I should note that a large number are quoted or referenced in the preceding pages. To one and all, I am profoundly thankful.
   The writing of Last Stand has been a journey of unforeseen twists, turns, and discoveries as I surveyed the iceberg. Over the lengthy span that I spent conducting interviews and research, my two children, Carter and Natalie, went from being grade schoolers to young adults. They literally grew up hearing stories about their dad’s encounters with Turner and the wide arc of his life. They witnessed how the final book moved from abstract concept to a human portrait hopefully drawn with myriad dimensions.
   I am indebted to them and, foremost, to my wife, Jeanne, for indulging me with time spent away and allowing me to take on a project that engulfed my focus for eight years. I also thank those critical individuals—you know who you are—who believed, unwaveringly, in this book. I offer a toast to you here and now.
   Going back a couple of decades to the first interview I ever had with Turner, I’ve learned that the most valuable asset a person can have isn’t money, but time to make a difference on earth. As an expression of how fleeting and fragile time is, several remarkable people whom I interviewed for this book have since passed on. They deserve our remembrance for contributions they’ve made: Richard Holbrooke, Jim Range, Kevin Honness, Joe Truett, David Getches, Johnny Godley, Russ Peterson, Bob Wussler, and Clarence “Curly Bear” Wagner. At Lyons/Globe Pequot, special mention must be directed to Allen M. Jones, my gifted, discerning editor who provided a clear-headed, even-keeled, and indispensible role in helping me pare back and tighten the manuscript. It took a true Westerner with an innate familiarity for the West to grasp the significance of Turner’s place in it—and Allen is that person. Up the chain of command, I need to offer praise to Erin Turner, Meredith Dias, and their colleagues, including Laurie Kenney, Josh Rosenberg, and Tom Holton. Lyons is a small house that has shown itself capable of executing on an expansive project. Well done.
   Six individuals within Turner’s inner circle have my eternal gratitude: Debbie Masterson, Turner’s executive assistant in Atlanta; Karen and Jim Averitt, based in Bozeman, Montana; Russ Miller, Turner’s vice president and general manager of his western ranches; Mike Phillips, a biologist who runs the Turner Endangered Species Fund; and Taylor Glover, who looks after Turner in ways that far transcends his role as the chief executive officer. This book couldn’t have happened without them.
   I also thank Turner’s children and their families for making themselves available and offering enlightening windows into Ted. Beyond them, an orbit of exceptional individuals that form the core of Turner’s braintrust: former US senators Sam Nunn and Tim Wirth, and Mike Finley, who have overseen the three major foundations Turner created. Other influential figures, who similarly made themselves available for interviews, are: former US President Jimmy Carter, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev, Lester Brown, former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Jane Fonda, Tom Brokaw, former Vice President Al Gore, John Malone, Charles Curtis, Graham Allison, Pat Mitchell, George McKerrow, Barbara Pyle, Jean-Michel Cousteau, Jane Goodall, and others who have intersected with Turner near and afar.
   In addition, these people also provided vital constructive perspective, read/listened/served as sounding boards to drafts, or aided in the research/review process: Phillip Evans, Cathy Gwin, Tim Flannery, Paul Ehrlich, T. Boone Pickens, Dan Flores, Joe Gutkoski, Frank and Deborah Popper, Wes Jackson, Leon Neel, Mike Clark, Pavel Palazhchenko, Sally Ranney, Katie Distler Eckman, Cynthia MacDonald, Kristine Witherspoon, Mike Gilpin, Dan Goodman, Catherine Crier, Dennis Glick, Bob Buzzas, Ray Rasker, Elena Cizmaric, Baldwin Harris, Devon Finley, Carl Pope, Steve Topping, Terry Anderson, Kalee Kreider, Pat Clancey, Bruce Farling, Rick Peterson, Randal Dutra, John Felsing, Alex Diekmann, Al Zelver, Michael Soule, Ed Bangs, Doug Smith, L. David Mech, Steve Duerr, Greg Hagan, Bill Newmark, John Hoogland, Bill Burke (co-author of the Turner memoir Call Me Ted), Brian Kahn, Tim Sandlin, Gerald Durley, Bernice King, Susan Clark, Thomas Kaplan, Tim Crawford, Jim Peterson, Brian Schweitzer, Peter Bahouth, and others.
   Last, but certainly not least, are those who gave me priceless assistance on every one of Turner’s landholdings/enterprises across the United States, in Atlanta, and in Argentina. They’re the trusted folks whom Turner regards as extended members of his own family: Tom and Linda Waddell, Steve and Janie Dobrott, Dave and Linda Dixon, Mark and Pat Kossler, Tom and Irma LeFaive, Keith and Eva Yearout, Danny Johnson, Carter Kruse, Carolyn Godley and the rest of her clan, Ray and Joanne Tudor and their clan, John and Jaynee Hansen, Frank Purvis and his clan, Raymond Bass, Bud Griffith, David Withers, Marv Jensen, David Hunter, Dustin Long, George Richards, Chris Francis, Rob Arnaud, Jim Dorn, Ray King, Val Asher, Todd Traucht , Neil Lawson, Josh Marks, Bob Biebel, Dusty Hepper, John Hurd, Tom Bragg, Terry Purdum, Johnny Covey, Jack and Gail Shell, Brian and Diane Ward, Bob and Laurie Dineen, Ty Ward, Dave Carter, Magnus McCaffery, Barb Killoren, Aaron and Alisha Paulson, Malcolm and Trudy Deane, Pablo Rehbein, Ronnie Olsen, and Gustavo Olsen—the Norwegian-Argentine boatman who was there with me on the Rio Collón Curá that autumn day when Turner put down his fly rod and started to wax/reflect on the most closely guarded aspects of his life.
   APPENDIX
   Turner Foundation, Inc.
   TFI Grantees as of September 13, 2012
   Total Giving to Date: $358 million
   Grantee Names
   1000 Friends of Florida
   1000 Friends of New Mexico
   10000 Years Institute
   20/20 Vision Education Fund
   2041 Foundation Incorporated
   A Better Hometown Community
   A Friends House
   A Territory Resource
   Academy for Educational Development
   Academy Theatre
   ACLU
   Action Canada for Population and Development
   Action Health Incorporated
   Adelante Resource Conservation and Development Council
   Adolescent Pregnancy Coalition of North Carolina
   Advocacy Arts Foundation
   Advocates for Youth
   African Wildlife Foundation
   Africare
   AID Atlanta
   Alabama Rivers Alliance
   Alan Guttmacher Institute
   Alaska Center for the Environment
   Alaska Conservation Foundation
   Alaska Forum for Environmental Responsibility
   Alaska Marine Conservation Council
   Alaska Public Interest Research Group
   Alaska Wilderness League
 />   Alaska Wildlife Alliance
   Alberta Wilderness Association
   Alder Volunteer Fire Department
   Alfred B. Maclay, Jr. Private Day School
   ALIMAR
   All Saints Episcopal Church
   Alliance for Affordable Energy
   Alliance for Justice
   Alliance for Nuclear Accountability
   Alliance for School Choice
   Alliance for the Rio Grande Heritage
   Alliance for the Wild Rockies
   Alliance for Water Efficiency
   Alliance Theatre
   Altamaha Riverkeeper, Inc.
   Alternative Energy Resources Organization
   Alzheimer’s Disease & Related Disorders Association, Inc.
   Amazon Alliance for Indigenous and Traditional Peoples of the Amazon Basin
   Amazon Watch
   American Association for the Advancement of Science
   American Bird Conservancy
   American Birding Association
   American Cancer Society , Inc. ‐ Georgia Chapter
   American Cancer Society, Inc. ‐ Illinois Chapter
   American Cancer Society, Inc. ‐ South Carolina Chapter
   American Chestnut Foundation, Inc.
   American Council for an Energy‐Efficient Economy
   American Farmland Trust
   American Fisheries Society
   American Forests
   American Heart Association, Inc. ‐ Florida Chapter
   American Heart Association, Inc. ‐ Georgia Chapter
   American Hotel & Lodging Educational Foundation
   American Indian Institute
   American Jewish Committee
   American Land Institute
   American Lands Alliance
   American Littoral Society ‐ Cape Florida Project
   American Littoral Society ‐ ReefKeeper Int’l Division
   American Lung Association ‐ Atlanta Chapter
   American Lung Association ‐ DC Chapter
   American Lung Association of the Southeast, Inc.
   American Medical Women’s Association
   American Museum of the Moving Image
   American Music Scholarship Association
   American Oceans Campaign
   American Red Cross
   American Rivers, Inc.
   American Saddle Horse Museum Association, Inc.
   American Saddlebred Special Commission
   American Sail Training Association
   American Solar Energy Society
   American Thoracic Society, Inc.
   American University
   American Whitewater
   American Wildlands
   Americans for Equitable Climate Solutions
   Americans for Our Heritage and Recreation
   Americans for the Environment
   American’s Wildlife Association for Resource Education
   American‐Scandinavian Foundation
   America’s Watershed Landkeeper
   America’s Wildlife Association for Resource Education
   Amigos Bravos, Inc.
   Amigos of Earth
   Amory Lovins‐Consultant
   Anchors Away
   Ancient Forest International
   Andrew J. Young Foundation, Inc.
   Androcles Society
   Animal Health Trust US Ltd.
   Animal Protection of New Mexico, Inc.
   Antarctica Project
   Anti‐Defamation League
   AOPA Foundation, Inc.
   Apalachicola Bay and Riverkeeper, Inc.
   Aperture Foundation, Inc.
   Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment
   Appalachian Trail Conference
   Appleseed Foundation/Montana Law Center
   Aquidneck Island Trust
   Arcadia Wildlife Preserve, Inc.
   Argentina’s Ornithological Association
   Arid Lands Project
   Arizona Board of Regents
   Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest
   Arizona Fraternal Order of Police Foundation, Inc.
   Arizona Memorial Museum Association
   Arizona State University ‐ Department of Anthropology
   Arizona State University ‐ School of Human Evolution and Social Change
   Arizona‐Sonora Desert Museum
   Armed Forces Foundation
   Arms Control Association
   Armuchee Alliance
   Artemis Common Ground
   Artemis Wildlife Foundation/Common Ground
   Asian Pacific Environmental Network
   Associated Builders and Contractors, Inc.
   Association for Vulsurg
   Association of Small Foundations
   Athens Land Trust
   Athens‐Clark Heritage Foundation
   Atlanta Anti‐Eating Disorders League
   Atlanta Audubon Society
   Atlanta Ballet, Inc.
   Atlanta Bicycle Campaign
   Atlanta Botanical Garden
   Atlanta Boy Choir
   Atlanta Children’s Shelter
   Atlanta College of Art
   Atlanta Community Food Bank
   Atlanta Education Fund, Inc.
   Atlanta Hawks Foundation, Inc.
   Atlanta Historical Society, Inc.
   Atlanta History Center
   Atlanta Housing Authority
   Atlanta International School, Inc.
   Atlanta Lyric Theatre
   Atlanta Neighborhood Development Partnership
   Atlanta Outward Bound Center
   Atlanta Partnership for Arts in Learning
   Atlanta Resource Foundation
   Atlanta Ronald McDonald House Charities, Inc.
   Atlanta Symphony Orchestra
   Atlanta Women’s Foundation Inc.
   Atlanta‐Fulton County Zoo, Inc.
   Atlantic Salmon Federation, Inc.
   Audubon Nebraska
   AVSC International
   Bank Information Center
   Barrett Memorial Hospital Foundation
   Bass and Howes
   Bat Conservation International, Inc.
   Bay Area Nuclear Waste Coalition
   Beartooth Nature Center
   Beaufort County Open Land Trust, Inc.
   Beaufort High School Theatre
   Belgrade Youth Forum
   Beltline Partnership, Inc.
   Better World Fund
   Better World Society
   Bide‐a‐Wee Home Association
   Big Brothers Big Sisters of Galatin County
   Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metro Atlanta, Inc.
   Big Sky Wildcare Raptor Center
   Big Sky Youth Empowerment
   Big Sur Arts Initiative, Inc.
   Big Sur Land Trust
   Big Sur Learning Project
   Big Wild Advocates
   Bighorn Institute
   Bill Fish Foundation
   Biodiversity Legal Foundation
   Biodiversity Project
   Bird Emergency Aid and Kare Sanctuary
   Black Women’s Wellness Center
   Blackfeet Reservation Development Fund, Inc.
   Blackfoot Legacy
   Blenheim Foundation
   Blue Mountain Clinic, Inc.
   Bluegrass Conservancy, Inc.
   Bluewater Network
   B’nai B’rith International
   B’nai B’rith Youth Organization
   Boggs Rural Life Center, Inc.
   Boone and Crockett Wildlife Conservation Program
   Boulder‐Lhasa Sister City Project
   Boy Scouts of America ‐ Atlanta
   Boy Scouts of America ‐ Coastal Carolina Council
   Boys & Girls Club of America
   Boys & Girls Club of Sierra County
   Boys & Girls Club of the Big Bend
   Boys & Girls Clubs of Lowcountry, Inc.
   Boys Farm
   Bozeman Deaconess Foundation for Gifting
   Bozeman Public Library Foundation, Inc.
   Bozeman Youth Initiative
   Bread for the Journey
   Bridger Clinic
   Broad River Watershed Association
   Broadwater County Social Services Committee
   Brookings Institution Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy
   Brooks School
   Brookwood School
   Brown Bear Resources, Inc.
   Brown College
   Buckhead Baseball, Inc.
   Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge
   Buffalo Field Campaign
   Business Executives for National Security Education Fund
   Business for Social Responsibility Education Fund
   Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities Information Fund
   California Association of Resource Conservation Districts
   California Public Interest Research Group Charitable Trust
   Callanwolde Fine Arts Center
   Callaway Gardens
   Calvert Foundation
   Camp High Harbor
   Campaign for a Prosperous Georgia
   Campaign for America’s Wilderness
   Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society ‐ BC Chapter
   Cancer Research Foundation
   Capacity, Inc.
   Caprock Partners Foundation
   Captain Cooper Parent Club
   Captain Planet Foundation, Inc.
   CARAES Lowcountry Modeling
   CARE
   Caribbean Conservation Corporation
   Carmel Unified School District
   Carolina Art Association
   Carolina Farm Stewardship Association
   Carrie Steele‐Pitts Home
   Carter Center
   Cascade County Historical Society
   Cashiers Historical Society, Inc.
   Castle‐Crown Wilderness Coalition
   
 
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