Book Review: The Library of America Aldo Leopold
/The most cherished nature classic since "Walden" gets the sparkling Library of America canonization
Read MoreThe most cherished nature classic since "Walden" gets the sparkling Library of America canonization
Read MoreThe many natural worlds of India - and the variety of striking animals who inhabit those worlds - come alive in this enormous illustrated volume
Read MoreThe burgeoning human population is encountering new and strange pathogens every day - how long until one of them becomes the next HIV ... or Black Death?
Read MoreAn emotionally stunning memoir about Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary, where animals once fated for the slaughterhouse are given normal, happy lives
Read MoreA Buffalo in the House, The Extraordinary story of Charlie and His Family
R. D. Rosen
Random House, 2007
Now out in paperback is R.D. Rosen’s entertaining and enormously moving A Buffalo in the House, the story of how Veryl Goodnight and her husband Roger Brooks adopted a buffalo calf, named him Charlie, and made him a member of their bustling Santa Fe home. Charlie grows up (very quickly – two pounds a day!) to display a quiet good humor that is neither human nor canine nor feline but distinctly his own, and Rosen captures perfectly all the ways animals insinuate themselves into our hearts, as in a wrenching scene in which Charlie takes sick:
It was beginning to feel as if there was a glass partition between them [Charlie and Roger], the way there is between the healthy and the sick. Though the ill remain like us in every way but their illness, they inhabit a different world, fragile and unreliable, separated from others by the immediacy of their pain and fear. To dissipate some of the strangeness, humans can acknowledge it in words. Roger and Charlie seemed to have reached the limits of their extraordinary intimacy. Moreover, Charlie wouldn’t touch his food, which meant Roger couldn’t give him the antibiotics Dr. Callan had prescribed. In his stall, Charlie lowered his head and started eating dirt. It broke Roger’s heart.
The story of how one amazing family adapts to this one-ton orphan in their midst is just one strand of this entirely satisfying book. Veryl Goodnight is a descendant of Charles and Mary Ann Goodnight, who a century earlier had fought to preserve the last of the buffalo from extinction, and Rosen therefore spends a good amount of time studying not only the history of mankind’s interaction with buffalo in America but also the ongoing attempts at buffalo conservation – attempts Roger joins in, after Charlie’s death:
As he watched the proceedings on the other side of the river [buffalo, across the Yellowstone River in Yellowstone National Park], Roger felt a brief surge of relief. The sight of the buffalo, the progeny of those few animals who had escaped through the cracks of a nightmare 130 years before, delivered him a moment from his mourning. Charlie had walked into his life, told his story, and then disappeared, but the story, and these buffalo, were still alive, and the gift was still in motion.
Those of you who missed Buffalo in the House when it was published last year should investigate it today; it’s an urgently memorable reading experience.
Now in paperback: Juliet Eilperin's gripping and personality-filled study of sharks and the people who study them
Read MoreA gorgeously-written new book on the vanishing black rhinos of south-western Africa
Read MoreA wonderful new book explores not only the Pleistocene era but the IDEA of the Pleistocene
Read MoreA slim, fantastic new book on dead bodies, decay, road kill, and circling vultures! Happy summer!
Read MoreA fiery new book condemns the evils of hunting
Read MoreThe closest thing to a genuine 'moose-whisperer' finally gets around to writing the Bible on the species!
Read MoreD. Graham Burnett, a young historian of science, produces a fantastic and important encyclopedic history of the long, torturous, often retrograde progress toward "Save the Whales."
Read Morea fact-filled compendium of killer creatures!
Read MoreA new reprint of a classic book about a hardscrabble pride of lions in Kenya
Read MoreAn enchantingly small focus creates a modern-day masterpiece of natural history
Read MoreA paperback reprint of a modern nature classic
Read MoreIn conjunction with a recent PBS special, a classic book is re-issued: the story of a man who became the mother, father, and leader to an engaging group of wild turkeys
Read MoreA massive collection of essays examining all aspects of animal rights.
Read MoreThe originator of Constructal Theory writes another book expounding his notion that all things flow against resistance, and that everything flowing is alive.
Read MoreA gigantic new paperback examines every nook and cranny of Darwin's famous theory, still controversial after 150 years.
Read MoreThis is a place for all of my writing about books.