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Double Hyenas and Lazarus Birds: A Sideways Look at the Pacific Ocean and Everything In It [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 203x139 mm, black-and-white photographs
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Heyday Books
  • ISBN-10: 1597146668
  • ISBN-13: 9781597146661
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 203x139 mm, black-and-white photographs
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Heyday Books
  • ISBN-10: 1597146668
  • ISBN-13: 9781597146661
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
"The author takes to the high seas in pursuit of elusive birds, artistic ghosts, fathers and their memories, and above all, safe harbor"--

Lauded essayist takes to the high seas in hot pursuit of elusive birds, artistic ghosts, fathers and their memories, and above all, safe harbor.

"Among nature writers now working, Charles Hood is my favorite." —Jonathan Franzen

Charles Hood is on a boat, wearing at least two life jackets as he scans the sky for seabirds and plumbs the depths of his—and our—relationship with the vast Pacific Ocean. Winner of the Foreword INDIES Book of the Year for his collection of essays A Salad Only the Devil Would Eat: The Joys of Ugly Nature, Hood now brings his irrepressible curiosity to the lives of petrels, frigate birds, sea snakes, and flying fish. During our voyage, he resurrects Melville's journey on tempestuous seas to San Francisco, takes us into the storm-tossed minds and paintings of J. M. W. Turner and Winslow Homer, and surfaces the trauma—still reverberating—to ocean and family ecologies alike from World War II. As sharp and witty as ever, Hood also turns his scrutiny on a more personal history, navigating murky waters of harm and forgiveness, love and entrapment. Full of wonder, joy, and terror at the shared capacity of the ocean and the humans on its edges to nurture life and damage it irreparably, this book is a vessel, seaworthy and transportive.

Recenzijos

Praise for Double Hyenas and Lazarus Birds:

"In his rollicking essay collection Double Hyenas and Lazarus Birds, Charles Hood reckons with the ocean's simultaneous allure and risk through stories of seabird-watching and of his father's wartime service in the Pacific Theater." Foreword

"Among nature writers now working, Charles Hood is my favorite. He never stops telling stories, and his perspective is fundamentally comic, even when hes recounting a tragedy." Jonathan Franzen

"Hood's eye for wonder out on the water is an absolute delight. Enlightening and quietly heart-wrenching at times, this book gave me a deeper appreciation for how the sea connects us all." Rosanna Xia, author of California Against the Sea

"Charles Hood professes to be scared to death of water and with good cause; but he is also one of the world's most accomplished list keepers of birds and animals that fly above and float on and course beneath lakes and rivers and oceans. Hood swims in a sea of words you never knew you needed and his prose will teach you how powerful the free-style stroke can be." William Fox, Director of The Center for Land + Environment, Nevada Museum of Art

Praise for Charles Hood:

"Reading Hood's work will make you feel smarter but, even more crucially in this dire age, more open to the sublime." Los Angeles Times

"Once you've had a taste of the world of Charles Hood, youll want to follow him wherever he goes. He's brilliantly entertaining." Elizabeth McKenzie, author of The Dog of the North

"With a poet's sensitivity, Hood shows himself to be as in love with words as with what he sees around him [ ...] his essays will charm, delight, and bring attention into high gear so that even a walk through an empty city lot will reveal treasures for the mind and heart." Foreword Reviews

Hood is the love child of Rebecca Solnit and Edward Abbey, assuming such a child had been raised in an art colony by demented garden gnomes." Michael Guista, author of Brain Work

Author's Note

Good Water, Bad Water

A Tropicbird for Trudy

Sea Level Doesn't Exist

The Half-Life of Salt

Sunrise with Sea Snakes

Double Hyena Ollies a Railing

How to Be an Albatross

The Lazarus Birds of Norfolk Island

Watching Pingüinos at the Rey Jorge Dump

Ernst Mayr Was Never Bored

Bombing the Barnacles

Pages from My Last Field Guide

Seaweed, Stones, Seed Pearls, Twine

How to Photograph a Bird

Going to the Museum with Winslow Homer

The Biblical Tide Pools of Cannery Row

Melville in Patagonia

Ghost Ship

Notes and Image Credits

About the Author

A Note on Type
Poet and essayist Charles Hood has been a factory worker, a ski instructor, and a birding guide in Africa. His recent books published by Heyday include Nocturnalia, an appreciation of nature after dark, and the essay collection A Salad Only the Devil Would Eat: The Joys of Ugly Nature. His wildlife studies have taken him around the world, from the high Arctic to the South Pole, and from Tibet to West Africa to the Amazon. Mammal no. 1,000 seen and recorded on his world animal list was a Crossley's dwarf lemur in Madagascar. (Mammal no. 999 was a Malagasy white-bellied free-tailed bat.) Recently retired and now professor emeritus, Hood lives in the Mojave Desert with two kayaks, two mountain bikes, two dogs, and five thousand books.