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Utter, Earth: Advice on Living in a More-than-Human World [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 238 pages, kõrgus x laius: 203x127 mm, kaal: 272 g, 19 b&w images
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2024
  • Kirjastus: West Virginia University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1959000152
  • ISBN-13: 9781959000150
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 238 pages, kõrgus x laius: 203x127 mm, kaal: 272 g, 19 b&w images
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2024
  • Kirjastus: West Virginia University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1959000152
  • ISBN-13: 9781959000150
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Part nature guide, part self-help column, and all love letter to the more-than-human world, this book is a light, literary take on an animal book for grown-ups"--

Part nature guide, part self-help column, and all love letter to the more-than-human world, Utter, Earth is an exercise in wonder. For animal lovers and readers of Brian Doyle, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and Amy Leach.
 
A light, literary take on an animal book for grown-ups, a tongue-in-cheek self-help column with lessons drawn from nature, a sort of hitchhiker’s guide to the more-than-human world—Isaac Yuen’s Utter, Earth is a celebration, through wordplay and earthplay, of our planet’s riotous wonders.
 
In a time of dirges and elegies for the natural world, Utter, Earth features odes to sloths, tributes to trilobites, and ringing endorsements for lichen. For animal lovers and readers of Brian Doyle, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and Amy Leach, each essay of this one-of-a-kind collection combines joyous language, whimsical tangents, and scientific findings to remind us of and reconnect us with those to whom we are inextricably bound. Highlighting life that once was, still is, and all that we stand to lose, this living and lively mini encyclopedia (complete with glossary) shines the spotlight on the motley, fantastical, and astonishing denizens with whom we share this planet.

Part nature guide, part self-help column, and all love letter to the more-than-human world, Utter, Earth is an exercise in wonder. For animal lovers and readers of Brian Doyle, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and Amy Leach.

Arvustused

To shoal is to be social, to sense together, we learn in one of Yuens more-than-human essays. But to school is to sweep together in unison, to dazzle with coherence. Its this spirit of schooling that animates Utter, Earth, essays thatin their curiosity, play, and careaim to weave us back into a world of which we are but one small part. How would our language change if we invited nonhuman others alongside us again in fellowship, if our lives not only allowed for but celebrated everything swimming just beyond the limits of what we know? Its not time for school, its time to school, to school with the creatures of Utter, Earth, the lemurs, leopards, and leafcutter ants, the wombats, waterbuck, and wildebeest, to school with others to find ourselves again. - David Naimon, host of Between the Covers

Utter, Earth leaps, ranges, delvesor should I say rabbits, antelopes, and elephant seals? Isaac Yuens playful, precise book will delight biologist and linguaphile alike. With persnickety glee and accuracy, he holds obscure facts of the more-than-human world up to the light in a style thats a mashup of Rachel Carson, Gary Larson, Ross Gay, David Sedaris, and David Attenborough. The enthusiasm and delight of Utter, Earth is infectious, and thats just the point. Yuen wants us to fall in love with the beings we share this amazing planet with, to realize the human way of living, breathing, birthing, eating, working, and caring is not the acme but just one option among many wonderful, amazing ways of beingand we could perhaps learn a thing or two from dung beetles and hagfish if we allowed ourselves to be curious. I laughed aloud while reading Utter, Earth, and the naturalist in me bows to the huge body of knowledge and research that permits Yuens accuracy to sing with such a light touch. Do yourself a favor and read every page, including the Brief Thoughts on Almost Every Mentioned, Mostly Living Thing that serves as a quasi-appendix. Youll leave your chair ready to appreciate the world around you anew. - Elizabeth Bradfield, naturalist, author of Toward Antarctica, and coeditor of Cascadia Field Guide: Art, Ecology, Poetry

1. Din
Yes, You Can Leave the Hospital Without Naming Your Baby
Second Best Is Best

2. Spectacle
On Sights Unseen
102 Briefly Mentioned, Mostly Living Things
The Perfect Party Guest

3. Contact
A School Is a Type of Shoal
A Hearth Is a Kind of Home

4. Exchange
A Breath in Four Parts
How to Make Friends and Keep Them Lifelong
Life Lessons from the Odd and Ancient

5. Duress
How to Debate as a Fish
Giving Up on Your Dreams
Going Down to Ground

6. Rebound
Creature Career Counseling
Reinvention Is a Matter of Necessity

7. Sustain
Pick-A-Mix, Build-A-Beast
So You Want to Write an Animal Essay

Brief Thoughts on Almost Every Mentioned, Mostly Living Thing (in Alphabetical Order)
Acknowledgments
Isaac Yuen is a first-generation Hong Kong Canadian author. His work has appeared in AGNI, Gulf Coast, Orion, Shenandoah, Tin House, and numerous other publications. He has held residencies and fellowships at the Jan Michalski Foundation for Literature in Switzerland and the Hanse-Wissenschaftskolleg Institute of Advanced Studies in Germany. Utter, Earth is his first solo book.