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The Animal Dialogues

Uncommon Encounters in the Wild

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From one of the finest nature writers at work in America today-a lyrical, dramatic, illuminating tour of the hidden domain of wild animals.
Whether recalling the experience of being chased through the Grand Canyon by a bighorn sheep, swimming with sharks off the coast of British Columbia, watching a peregrine falcon perform acrobatic stunts at 200 miles per hour, or engaging in a tense face-off with a mountain lion near a desert waterhole, Craig Childs captures the moment so vividly that he puts the reader in his boots.
Each of the forty brief, compelling narratives in The Animal Dialogs focuses on the author's own encounter with a particular species and is replete with astonishing facts about the species' behavior, habitat, breeding, and lifespan. But the glory of each essay lies in Childs's ability to portray the sometimes brutal beauty of the wilderness, to capture the individual essence of wild creatures, to transport the reader beyond the human realm and deep inside the animal kingdom
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 29, 2007
      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.

    • Booklist

      December 15, 2007
      In an evocative series of essays, Childs writes of moments of connection betweenanimal and human: hiking a desert canyon, descending by hand- and foot-holds, and almost stepping on a mountain lion, or finding a raccoon trapped in a desert pool and the epic battle that ensued when Childs rescued it. Sleeping in a tepee with opened flaps and being awakened by the breeze from a hovering hummingbirds wings. Or a praying mantis that crashed a picnic, observing Childs with its bulbous gaze. In lyrical language, Childs places the reader in the moment, and we feel the power of a spotted owl catching a mouse, the drama of an elk herd crashing through the snow, or the swaying of trees in the wind as Childs climbs with a porcupine. A book for dipping into during quiet moments, Childs essayswill teach all comers how to get inside the moment and touch the animals with which we share our planet.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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