David B. Williams | |
---|---|
Occupation | Freelance writer |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Education | B.A. geology |
Alma mater | Colorado College |
Genre | Natural history |
Notable work | Stories in Stone |
Notable awards |
Washington State Book Award finalist (2010) Northwest Writers Fund grant (2014) |
David B. Williams is a freelance writer in Seattle. Originally raised in Seattle, he went to college in Colorado where he initially studied physics but switched to geology. [1] [2] He received a Bachelor of Arts in geology from Colorado College and worked as a park ranger at Arches National Park in Utah. [3] Williams returned to Seattle to be a writer of natural history books and occasional urban geology tour guide. [4] He was employed at Seattle's Burke Museum as of 2014. [5] He writes a biweekly newsletter, Street Smart Naturalist: Notes on People, Place, and the PNW. [6] One local bookseller wrote, "When it comes to books about Seattle and its surroundings, there's one must-read writer as far as I'm concerned, and that's David B. Williams." [7]
Williams' interest in urban geology was sparked by the use of stone in the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel. [2]
David B. Williams | |
---|---|
Occupation | Freelance writer |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Education | B.A. geology |
Alma mater | Colorado College |
Genre | Natural history |
Notable work | Stories in Stone |
Notable awards |
Washington State Book Award finalist (2010) Northwest Writers Fund grant (2014) |
David B. Williams is a freelance writer in Seattle. Originally raised in Seattle, he went to college in Colorado where he initially studied physics but switched to geology. [1] [2] He received a Bachelor of Arts in geology from Colorado College and worked as a park ranger at Arches National Park in Utah. [3] Williams returned to Seattle to be a writer of natural history books and occasional urban geology tour guide. [4] He was employed at Seattle's Burke Museum as of 2014. [5] He writes a biweekly newsletter, Street Smart Naturalist: Notes on People, Place, and the PNW. [6] One local bookseller wrote, "When it comes to books about Seattle and its surroundings, there's one must-read writer as far as I'm concerned, and that's David B. Williams." [7]
Williams' interest in urban geology was sparked by the use of stone in the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel. [2]