
Animal, Mineral, Radical: Essays on Wildlife, Family, and Food
Author(s): Bk Loren (Author)
- Publisher: Counterpoint
- Publication Date: 12 Feb. 2013
- Language: English
- Print length: 220 pages
- ISBN-10: 9781619020733
- ISBN-13: 9781619020733
Book Description
From the acclaimed author of Theft: “A lyrical exploration of the timeless themes of nature, mortality, love, and family” in the American West (Kristen Iverson, author of Full Body Burden).
“Radical, before it meant a person who advocates strong political reform, meant getting to the root of things, the origin. It comes from the Latin radix, radicis, meaning radish, a root vegetable.” ―BK Loren
These meditative essays range in subject from a transcendental encounter with a pack of coyotes to the irony of a neighbor’s claim that nature “has gone out of vogue”; from a mother’s slow deterioration from Parkinson’s disease to the unexpected way the Loma Prieta earthquake eroded the author’s depression by offering her a sense of her small place in our wild and worthwhile world.
Award-winning writer and naturalist BK Loren takes an empathetic and gentle approach to the intricacies of human relationships and the nature of consciousness. Fear of death and time, cooperation born of clashing viewpoints, the beauty of tradition even when it’s destructive, a love of language, a sense of loss amid the fast-paced materialistic world―through each of these subjects and more, Loren peels back the layers of her own life, revealing what it means to be a human being in these often inhumane times.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“These essays are nurtured by a wisdom that shifts effortlessly from the evolutionary long view to the tragicomic flotsam of everyday life. Loren’s prose style is measured, lyrical, carefully wrought, yet also open to sudden swift martial arts kicks. A beguiling collection.” Phillip Lopate
Wise, intuitive, often witty, at times shocking . . .
Animal, Mineral, Radical is a lyrical exploration of the timeless themes of nature, mortality, love and familybut most importantly, it is the frank, forthright voice of a writer who sees the world clearly and brings fresh insight to what it means to be human in a sometimes dark and challenging world.” Kristen Iversen, author of Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats“BK Loren has burst onto the Western literary scene like some Rocky Mountain angel of sense-making in these terribly upside down times. These essays are not only compassionate, clear-seeing, beautifully made and tender towards the world and all of the creatures (including humans) who inhabit it, they are essential in that they remind us, on a gut level, what we are a part of. This landscape, this planet, this collective (un)consciousness. Read it to get mad/find hope/maybe change your life.” -Pam Houston, author,
Contents May Have ShiftedTender, sinewy; downbeat, upbeat; gentle, demanding: Loren’s dazzling prose is all of this and more. She’s a wizard with words, a kindly sage with bite, and her work is among the very best around.” Philip Zaleski, editor of
The Best Spiritual Writing seriesBK Loren is a smart, compassionate writer. There’s not an excess word in
Animal, Mineral, Radical. Her uniquely beautiful prose propelled me into a state wonder and discovery.” Harry Greene, author of Snakes: the Evolution of Mystery in NatureBK Loren’s writing is good food for the soul. I love, love, love this book!” Susan Feniger, Chef/Owner STREET & Border Grill Restaurants
“Some writers have ardent followings because seeing the world through their eyes is a rare and addictive treat, others because they write as beautifully as Yo-Yo Ma plays the cello. BK Loren’s appeal encompasses both.” Candace Walsh,
New Mexico MagazinePraise for
Theft:“
Theft is the best book I’ve read in as long as I can remember.”Catherine Ryan Hyde, author of Pay It Forward“BK Loren writes sentences, paragraphs, chapters like lit fuses.
Theft is an ambitious and distinctive fiction debut, taking us into the lives of two endangered species, Mexican wolves and a Southwest underclass family, equally hunted by fate.” Ivan Doig, author of Work SongWritten with clarity and vision, with prose that is both lyrical and visceral, Loren brings us on a journey of love, human fragility and the meaning of family. Theft is a story about piecing together what was left behind, a bighearted tale delivered in language that is as lovely as the Southwestern landscape it describes. An amazing accomplishment.” Mary Gauthier
Here’s a debut worth celebrating. Theft has a compelling story to tell, a moving drama that takes us into the Colorado wilderness and keeps circling back to a fraught childhood and to a fierce and loving bond between a brother and sister. That aching bond lies at the core of Theft, making reading the novel a heartrending experience.” John Dalton, author of
The Inverted Forest and Heaven LakeHow often do we come across a novel that is an achievement in both narrative suspense and in poetry, that wrestles with politics while never giving story short shrift? Theft is such a book, part environmental novel, part elegy to place, part family tragedy, part murder mystery. Capturing heart-raw subjects in incandescent prose, Loren gracefully and unforgettably unites the seen and the unseen worlds, the dark and the light.” Ann Pancake
Praise for
The Way of the River: Adventures and Meditations of a Woman Martial ArtistLoren’s careful, direct prose reflects the still gaze of the martial arts expert.”
Publishers’ WeeklyLoren’s beautifully written memoir addresses women’s fears, life challenges, spiritual and physical empowerment.”
The Women’s Review of Books
Wow! eBook
