The Heart of the Wild brings together some of today鈥檚 leading scientists, humanists, and nature writers to offer a thought-provoking meditation on the urgency of learning about and experiencing our wild places in an age of rapidly expanding human impacts.
These engaging essays present nuanced and often surprising perspectives on the meaning and value of 鈥渨ildness鈥 amid the realities of the Anthropocene. They consider the trends and forces鈥攆rom the cultural and conceptual to the ecological and technological鈥攖hat are transforming our relationship with the natural world and sometimes seem only to be pulling us farther away from wild places and species with each passing day. The contributors make impassioned defenses of naturalism, natural history, and nature education in helping us to rediscover a love for the wild at a time when our connections with it have frayed or been lost altogether.
Charting a new path forward in an era of ecological uncertainty, The Heart of the Wild reframes our understanding of nature and our responsibility to learn from and sustain it as the human footprint sinks ever deeper into the landscapes around us.
With contributions by Bill Adams, Joel Berger, Susan Clayton, Eileen Crist, Martha L. Crump, Thomas Lowe Fleischner, Harry W. Greene, Hal Herzog, Jonathan B. Losos, Emma Marris, Ben A. Minteer, Kathleen Dean Moore, Gary Paul Nabhan, Peter H. Raven, Christopher J. Schell, Richard Shine, and Kyle Whyte.
"The scientists, humanists, and nature writers whose essays grace this book present subtle, though sometimes striking, differences in defining the term wild. Their thought-provoking essays not only convey the complexities involved—the tensions among preservation, rewilding, and human access—but often surprise with their unconventional attitudes and perspectives. Yet each essayist seems to share a conviction that having a scientific grasp of the perils facing our planet is incomplete without forging a moral and emotional bond with it."鈥Kirkus Reviews
"Reading the essays in The Heart of the Wild stimulated much thought for this reader and will hopefully do so for many others. . . . [A] taste of their thinking should whet appetites to sit down with this book and carefully consider what the authors have to say."鈥擩ohn Miles, National Parks Traveler
"A provocative but closely reasoned argument for including the human element in any discussion of the wild."鈥擝ill Thompson, The Post and Courier
"[The writers] explore the importance of engaging with the natural world and seeing ourselves as part of it, not apart from it. In doing so, they also envision a novel way forward in which the ecological crises of our time no longer seem so insurmountable."鈥擩ohn Cannon, Mongabay
"Taken together, [these essays] do an admirable job of taking stock of where we are and making thoughtful and thought-provoking suggestions for where we need to go. I urge reading and reflection."鈥擱oberta L. Millstein, H-Net
“Falling in love with the world around us—a world from which we’re too often abstracted and distant—may be the first crucial step toward saving some of that creation. The essays in this book, from some of the wisest and most eloquent voices on the planet, should summon us to this vital work.”—Bill McKibben, editor of American Earth: Environmental Writing since Thoreau
“This richly reflective book alerts us that conserving nature’s diversity will take more than political will and conventional pieties. It will take some sharper thinking. We can’t honor or save the ‘heart’ of the ‘wild’ until we better understand, and agree more broadly upon, what those two words might mean.”—David Quammen, author of The Song of the Dodo and Breathless
“The Heart of the Wild is a wonderful collection—a rich conversation that challenges orthodoxies, makes unexpected connections, and reminds us of the value of even the humblest forms of life.”—Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts
“In the enduring words of Aldo Leopold, the ecologist lives alone in a world of wounds—but The Heart of the Wild makes for awfully good company. The eclectic essays in this collection probe and challenge conservation’s deepest-held beliefs, lament all our planet has lost, and outline provocative visions for a future in which nature persists, albeit in a much-changed form. By turns heartbreaking and inspiring, this book finds wildness in the Anthropocene’s rubble, and alleviates our loneliness along the way.”—Ben Goldfarb, author of Crossings and Eager
“This star-studded compendium of writing by some of the world’s leading thinkers and researchers belongs in every nature lover’s library. These essays will thrill and challenge and maybe even upset you—but there is no way you will come away from this book unmoved.”—Sy Montgomery, author of Of Time and Turtles: Mending the World, Shell by Shattered Shell