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Book Categories |
Editor's Introduction | ||
A Natural History | 3 | |
The Elements | 8 | |
The Canyon | 15 | |
The Canyon Wren | 17 | |
from "Desert of Definition" | 19 | |
The Rock Fig | 26 | |
Driving through Nature | 28 | |
Why Write about Nature? | 29 | |
Swamp Thing | 32 | |
Of Pinacate Beetles and Beaches | 40 | |
Notes of a Nature Writer: Big Bend National Park | 50 | |
Irregular Flight | 52 | |
Field Notes from the Southwest: 1992-1997 | 61 | |
from Going Back to Bisbee | 69 | |
Daybook: Bosque del Apache, New Mexico | 76 | |
Homecoming | 85 | |
from Downcanyon | 88 | |
Transition Zone | 95 | |
Fear Falls Away | 98 | |
Infidelity | 105 | |
On Sending the Raft North | 107 | |
The Crossing | 120 | |
Going to the Creek | 121 | |
Yuccas at 70 mph | 122 | |
The Turtle | 123 | |
Two Striped Lizards | 125 | |
The Healing Leaves | 127 | |
from High Tide in Tucson | 128 | |
A Nevada Treasure | 131 | |
Gila Wilderness | 135 | |
The Mountain | 148 | |
Chaco Night | 162 | |
On the Back of the Dragon | 180 | |
The Farm | 195 | |
Rain | 203 | |
The Heart's Resilience | 205 | |
Birds, Ice, Fire | 207 | |
El Rio Grande | 221 | |
A River of Women | 222 | |
Cuentista | 224 | |
The Seed of a Song | 225 | |
The Village on the Other Side of White Horse Pass | 226 | |
Territories | 227 | |
Pause | 232 | |
Muchas Gracias Por Todo | 234 | |
Land and Stars, The Only Knowledge | 236 | |
Culture and the Universe | 238 | |
Getting Ready | 240 | |
The Cures of Green and Night | 242 | |
A Physics of Sudden Light | 245 | |
The Endangered Roots of a Person | 247 | |
Cebolleros | 249 | |
The Motion of Songs Rising | 264 | |
Havasu City | 266 | |
Wind | 268 | |
Morning Air | 271 | |
Devil Deer | 275 | |
Sparton Industry | 282 | |
from Desierto: Memories of the Future | 284 | |
from "Lake of the Stone Mother" | 293 | |
Witness | 301 | |
Eagle Poem | 309 | |
What Holds the Water, What Holds the Light | 310 | |
from "Playing God on the Lawns of the Lord" | 314 | |
from "Regaining Paradise" | 318 | |
A Traffic Violation | 331 | |
Test | 336 | |
Tidings | 337 | |
from "From Hell to Breakfast" | 339 | |
Not by Human Measure | 344 | |
Suggested Additional Readings | 349 | |
List of Credits | 351 | |
About the Contributors | 359 | |
About the Editor | 373 | |
Index | 375 |
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Add Getting over the Color Green: Contemporary Environmental Literature of the Southwest, Desert vistas are often deemed vacant, inhospitable wastelands. Don't suggest that to Joy Harjo, Pat Mora, or other contemporary southwestern writers. In these arid stretches, often devoid of green, today's southwestern writers see pyrotechnic colo, Getting over the Color Green: Contemporary Environmental Literature of the Southwest to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Getting over the Color Green: Contemporary Environmental Literature of the Southwest, Desert vistas are often deemed vacant, inhospitable wastelands. Don't suggest that to Joy Harjo, Pat Mora, or other contemporary southwestern writers. In these arid stretches, often devoid of green, today's southwestern writers see pyrotechnic colo, Getting over the Color Green: Contemporary Environmental Literature of the Southwest to your collection on WonderClub |