Gorgeous poetry collection; almost life-changing! Alison Hawthorne Deming has collected animal poems from across time and space, including contemporary work by Black, Indigenous and Latin authors as well as the earliest writer ever (from Sumer) and the Hebrew Bible and of course Emily Dickinson and (rejoice!) Gerard Manley Hopkins. Robin Wall Kimmerer calls the collection, "an antidote to species loneliness." The book is grouped into 7 sections -- Praise, Lament, Companionship, Fear and Vulnerability, the Least Among Us, the Sacred, and the Future of Animals. For those in love with nature, but unsure about poetry, this organization of poems by theme really helps with comprehension. At the back, she's got a biographical sketch of the poets -- I would read each poet's bio after reading their poem, which also helped with comprehension and appreciation. Standouts for me were Robert Wrigley's Elk:
His Hindquarter must have fallen through
the ice, and he could not pull himself back out
and the incoming colder weather
refroze the hole around around him and he died, ...
And Rebbits and Fire by Alberto Rios:
Everything's been said
But one last thing about the desert,
And it's awful. During Brish fires int eh Sonoran Desert,
Brush fires that happen before the monsoon and in the great
Deep, wide and smothering heat of the hottest months...
BUT this is the sort of book you want to buy and dip into regularly, like a prayer book and let all the words work their magic on your heart and imagination. So tomorrow, others may be the standouts.
Run out and get a copy for yourself. Slake your "species loneliness" and discover how noticing animals changes us: "to labor and not to seek reward, he prays" (Seamus Heaney)
...