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Nature
Astonishment in Barry Lopez’s
Arctic Dreams
Anna Badkhen on an American Classic
By
Anna Badkhen
| March 14, 2019
Why is the Wilderness Experience Like a Dream?
Bruce Berger on Wildness and the Buried Self
By
Bruce Berger
| March 12, 2019
What Do We Really Know About Animals' Emotions?
Frans de Waal on What We May Share With Other Species
By
Frans de Waal
| March 12, 2019
The Vulnerability of Home on an Afflicted Planet, From California to Calcutta
When Every Displacement is a Catastrophic Breach
By
Torsa Ghosal
| March 6, 2019
Thomas McGuane: The Misadventures of an Angler
On the Beauty and Absurdity of Fly Fishing
By
Thomas McGuane
| March 4, 2019
Tigers Don't Eat Humans, So Why Did This One Kill Over 400 People?
Deforestation, Poaching, and White People
Created the Man-Eater of Champawat
By
Dane Huckelbridge
| February 20, 2019
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
How Do You Save an Endangered Species in a Warzone?
By
Alex Dehgan
| January 18, 2019
The Day the Llamas Came to the Bookstore
By
James Tate Hill
| December 17, 2018
Brandon Hobson on Recovering Cherokee Myths from His Grandfather's Notebook
By
Brandon Hobson
| December 11, 2018
The Grandfather of New Nature Writing Was a Bird-Loving Poet
John Clare, Peasant Poet, Ornithologist
By
Stephen Moss
| December 6, 2018
Windows to the World: At WS Merwin's Old French Farmhouse
Michael Wiegers Looks Out on the Landscapes of a Poet's Life
By
Michael Wiegers
| November 28, 2018
Does Art Originate From the Same Necessity That Gives Rise to Beehives?
Inger Christensen Meditates on the Importance of Creation
By
Inger Christensen
| November 27, 2018
When Amy Hempel's Dog Was Briefly Reincarnated as a Bear
On an Unexpected Visit Under a Freakish White Rainbow
By
Amy Hempel
| November 16, 2018
Dear Edward Abbey: Things Aren't Looking Great for the Wild
Amy Irvine on America's Vanishing Wilderness
By
Amy Irvine
| October 10, 2018
Meet the Beloved Pet Ravens of Charles Dickens
Grip I, Grip II, and, You Guessed It, Grip III
By
Christopher Skaife
| October 2, 2018
On Suicidal Sharks and Self-Harm
"On every level sharks were designed to make things bleed."
By
nicoleim
| October 1, 2018
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Page 46 of 51
New Series to Watch this Weekend
January 16, 2026
by
Olivia Rutigliano
Novelist Van Jensen Talks with His Mother, Acclaimed Painter Jean Jensen, About Art, Literature, and Family
January 16, 2026
by
Van Jensen
The Historical Implications and Fictional Possibilities of the Hindenberg Disaster
January 16, 2026
by
L. A. Chandlar
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Sensitive and powerful The women in em This Is Where the Serpent Lives em are…"