"In Making Do, Mardi Reardon-Smith offers a truly gripping account of care and its complexities across place, people, animals, plants, elements, and ancestors. Complicity and culpability in environmental injustices come to life in this ethnographically rich and conceptually innovative work, making it essential reading for scholars and students in environmental anthropology, the environmental humanities, and conservation science." Sophie Chao, The University of Sydney "Mardi Reardon-Smith offers a clear-eyed account of the contradictions that care for other species entailsfrom feral pigs to endangered parrotsas practiced by Aboriginal and settlers in northeastern Australia's Cape York peninsula. 'Making Do' troubles easy distinctions between wilderness and working lands, while maintaining a steadfast insistence that even violent forms of care are shaped by enduring obligations to land, life, and livelihoods." Laura A. Ogden, Dartmouth College