Loon Rangers
As part of community service, Miles Radke agrees to work for the State of New York on a common loon survey in the Adirondack Mountains. If he completes the summer job without incident, his record of misdemeanors will be cleared. Miles is assigned to assist Annie, a wildlife biologist. Their charge is to canoe a hundred lakes in the northern Adirondacks and report on any loon activity they encounter. Among his duties, Miles is responsible for keeping a journal of what they experience during the summer. Miles has spent most of his adult life as an itinerant worker. A free-spirited drifter, he often finds himself in trouble with the law. Annie, on the other hand, is a dedicated conservationist who once worked as a Greenpeace activist confronting Soviet whaling ships on the high seas. At first, Miles is skeptical of the survey. Gradually, though, he begins to appreciate the Adirondack backcountry and the value of their work. Eventually, he comes to identify with the loon as he slowly falls in love with his partner. This is ultimately a humorous, provocative, tragic novel about species extinction and what it means to live in the Anthropocene.
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Become an affiliate"I love novels where nature is a character, and nature is everywhere in Loon Rangers. The haunting call of loons themselves, of course, but so much more, a rich world richly portrayed. Into that world come Miles and Annie, and while we root for them to fall for each other, we are wary too. I thought more than once of that other ranger love story, Ed Abbey's Black Sun, and of early Jim Harrison and Peter Heller. A rich, engrossing book."
David Gessner Author of All the Wild That Remains: Wallace Stegner, Edward Abbey and the American West