Craig Childs naturalist, adventurer, desert ecologist, and frequent contributor to National Public Radio's Morning Edition lives in Crawford, Colorado. His previous books include House of Rain, The Way Out, The Secret Knowledge of Water and Soul of Nowhere.
The Animal Dialogues: Uncommon Encounters in the Wild
Paperback
(Reprint)
$16.00
- ISBN-13: 9780316066471
- Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
- Publication date: 03/11/2009
- Edition description: Reprint
- Pages: 352
- Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.20(h) x 1.00(d)
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THE ANIMAL DIALOGUES tells of Craig Childs' own chilling experiences among the grizzlies of the Arctic, sharks off the coast of British Columbia and in the turquoise waters of Central America, jaguars in the bush of northern Mexico, mountain lions, elk, Bighorn Sheep, and others. More than chilling, however, these stories are lyrical, enchanting, and reach beyond what one commonly assumes an "animal story" is or should be. THE ANIMAL DIALOGUES is a book about another world that exists alongside our own, an entire realm of languages and interactions that humans rarely get the chance to witness.
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Publishers Weekly
In these eloquent essays, naturalist and adventurer Childs (House of Rain) describes some of his extraordinary experiences with creatures-from wasps, red-spotted toads and hummingbirds to grizzly bears, coyotes and jaguars. Seeking entrée into animal societies, he interprets messages left in marks on the ground and in scents on leaves and trees, and communicates with animals directly using their own language of stares, gestures, postures, sounds, scents and gaits. He goes looking for animals alone in hazardous wilderness areas-tracking mountain goats in Colorado's Gore Range or surprising a secret society of ravens in a canyon in Utah. Always longing to be at one with animals, he is not afraid to climb an aspen to see the world from a porcupine's perspective, run with a herd of elk or wonder how it would feel to jump from a plane and fly with a bald eagle. Childs's captivating essays, rich in sensuous imagery (the porcupine "looks like a mop, a bundle of ponderosa pine needles, a mobile hairstyle"), are hauntingly beautiful and replete with evocative observations of animal life. 42 b&w illus. (Dec. 12)Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information
Kirkus Reviews
Naturalist and essayist Childs (House of Rain: Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest, 2007, etc.) celebrates wild creatures met in wild places. The author has a talent for bringing his encounters home and fashioning them into chromatic, immediate accounts. Some of the experiences chronicled here are quite simply breath-catching and heart-gladdening: following an intermittent stream of ruby-red dragonflies to a water source in a dry land; watching 50 violet-green swallows "working a cat's cradle into the air"; placing a mouse upon a branch to become a canape for a northern spotted owl. Occasionally-and profoundly, as the pursuer becomes the pursued-Childs is reminded that his place on the food chain is not necessarily at the apex. Surprise, a mountain lion! "It moves out from under the shadows so that both of us are in the same sunlight . . . It begins walking straight at me." Jeopardy doesn't have to come from something big or venomous, however; a raccoon that doesn't appreciate Child's efforts to rescue him becomes a 12-pound package of fury, snapping jaws. Only rarely does the author's inventiveness fail him: A black bear is the "dark prince of the mountains," and we must read about him "letting out a steaming arc" as he urinates into the cold morning air. As in his 1997 collection Crossing Paths, from which a few pieces are reprinted, Childs's great accomplishment is to excite our thrill in an animal's beauty and strangeness, then arouse our protective instincts by pointing out its vulnerability. Each of these pieces is a personal invitation to get outdoors and celebrate all things furred, feathered and scaled.