I see books such as Peterss as an expression of our Zeitgeist. I have the clear notion Pandoras Garden is necessary. In an era that some scientists have dubbed the Anthropocene, we need a clear understanding of the persistent power of what we call naturewhether that power is deemed invasive or otherwise. Pandoras Garden is essential reading for anyone who loves a beautiful essay and also for those who seek to learn. Peters's topics are quirky, and his research is strong. Hes that rare breed of self-critical environmentalist, and we need that in order to keep a balanced concern with the environment alive. -- BK Loren * author of Animal, Mineral, Radical: Essays on Wildlife, Family, and Food * The world is changing. Clinton Crockett Peters recognizes that as many species may disappear in the next century as did in the great dinosaur extinction. While that will lead to much despair, Peters argues that this is also a great time to recognize what species will adapt, how humans will appreciate whats left, and how life, like Kudzu, finds a way. While there is some eulogizing for lost species, there is also celebration of lifes, even a cockroachs, sweet ability to adjust and survive. The humor, the amount of research, and the way Peters weaves together his personal story with this global one make this not only a unique book but also a playful, engrossing one. -- Nicole Walker * author of Quench Your Thirst with Salt * I find it refreshing that Peters focuses outward, on things in the world independent of the self. Whats more, the writing is a pleasant blend of the clearly informational and the artfully lyrical, which helps with its purpose to get readers thinking not just about the nominal subjects (invasive species), but about peoples treatment of each other. Yet Peters doesnt preach and doesnt scold. He gently explores and asks questions. Its quite a moving book. -- Patrick Madden * author of Sublime Physick: Essays * Clinton Crockett Peters is part of the new breed of environmental writers who are clear-eyed and startling in their reframing of the old, ever-depressing news that we are failing in our duty as caretakers of the planet. His writing is never preachy nor overly earnest. He writes lyrically but authoritatively, as always the clear-eyed observer filled with an elegiac spirit. He will undoubtedly soon be compared to our best writers of nature from Annie Dillard to Barry Lopez to Gretel Ehrlich. -- Robin Hemley * author of Reply All: Stories * Pandoras Garden is a compelling bestiary of overlooked and misunderstood individuals, from Asian carp to cockroaches, Godzilla to kudzu. Extensively researched and deeply considered, Clint Peterss debut collection shows us the great emotional range of the oft-dismissed. When you turn the last page, close the cover, and walk out your door, the world you live in will buzz with a new kind of musicfresh tunes that these essays have taught you to hear. -- Elena Passarello * author of Animals Strike Curious Poses * From species to species, with a mix of the clinicians eye and the storytellers voice, Peters creates a sense of wonderment about his subjects. -- Jonathan Liebson * Texas Observer * Truth is indeed stranger than fiction, with his list of weird animals, insects, fish, reptiles and plants Florida panthers to cockroaches, rattlesnakes to stinking cedar. He brings the literary canon into the essays, freely connecting to sources ranging from news reports and magazine articles to the Bible. Even a literal fallen sparrow, for a meditation on life, death and kids. -- Christine Heinrichs * Society of Environmental Journalist Journal * In Pandoras Garden Peters proves himself a masterful storyteller, collapsing millennia and expanding single moments in a way that makes ecological and sociological phenomena fell immediate, inseparable, and deeply important. . . .Its also in this spirit that he suggests human stories offer possibilities weve never needed to imagine, and that weve seen in everything on Earth. -- Emily Block * Blackbird *