Wild Comfort: The Solace of Nature
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Become an affiliate"Nature writing at its most lyrical."--Shambhala Sun
"Moore recounts with descriptive poignancy how moonlight rides the waves toward shore; how a rubber boa relaxes and comes alive in the warmth of the human hand; how it can feel to sit in the sun, savoring the air with a sense that is not quite smell, not quite taste, but something in between. [Wild Comfort] is an invitation to us to experience our own belonging."--Yes! magazine
"Introspectives looking for nature writing in the vein of Rachel Carson or Annie Dillard will appreciate Wild Comfort, not only for its sensual imagery, but also for its informative and encouraging tone. Moore's impeccable attention to detail and vivid descriptions invoking all five senses are constant."--ForeWord Reviews
"With attention to the smallest details of the natural world, this very personal book unites our emotional world with the world that surrounds us."--Sierra Club's blog The Green Life "This slender collection of essays moves as powerfully and inevitably as a tide. Wild Comfort may be rooted in grief, in loss, in darkness, but Moore 's words carry us inexorably toward light and hope."-- Story Circle Book Reviews "Wild Comfort is a richly poetic book, tipsy with life, and Moore a wonderful guide to the wilderness and our own wildness. It's a book brimming with wonder, sorrow, happiness, and the intricate designs of nature that can surprise and sustain us all."--Diane Ackerman, author of The Zookeeper's Wife "Kathleen Dean Moore is a writer whose senses, heart, generosity, and intellect open in every direction. This book, filled with knowledge of the natural and human worlds, is a superb naturalist's handbook. It is also a praise book: an illuminated manuscript whose life overspills its own borders. In its grounded wisdoms, humility, curiosity, and in the kaleidoscope beauty of its descriptions, Wild Comfort reminds how to see, how to sing; how to welcome, with equal gravity and grace, whatever asks entrance into our lives. It is destined to become a classic."--Jane Hirshfield "What nature gives, it takes away. Kathleen Dean Moore feels the ache of this truth in her bones. And yet in spite of grieving over the death of friends, the extinction of species, and the tattering of Earth's web, she finds comfort in natural and human creations, in symphonies and snakes, in science and stars, in the beauty constantly upwelling from the mystery we call life. This book itself is such a consoling creation, a cause for gratitude and joy."--Scott Russell Sanders, author of A Private History of Awe "Moore's descriptions are powerfully visceral. Readers will find that the world seems larger, wilder, and yet safer than they had thought--more beautiful and more like home."--Book Page "This collection of essays, reveries, and meditations interweaves keen observations of the natural world with descriptions of wilderness travel, conversations, stories, and philosophical musings. It is easy to imagine Moore lying next to Plato, intensely focused and observant, pointing out the natural world's soothing and transformative miracles. She excels at it."--The Oregonian " Moore turns over rocks and describes what she finds--even if, like a seething mass of snakes, it lacks traditional beauty. This makes her experiences with nature extremely readable."--The Southwest Portland Post "Good writers, like good friends, are equal parts familiarity and surprise, giving us, upon each encounter, both the pleasure of routine and the promise of something new. Such a writer is Kathleen Dean Moore. Moore has a nice way of shaking us awake by turning convention on its ear."--The Advocate