Imagine sending a number of nature writers out into the same unrelenting stretch of Sonoran Desert. Then consider telling them to focus their attention on just one animalOvis canadensis,
Counting sheep with these authors will keep you wide awake. . . . essential reading for naturalists and conservationists. Highly recommended.
Library Journal
Counting Sheep permits us to briefly skirt the world of another species, even as that world continues to change. If we come away realizing how little we know about bighorns and the other desert denizens, perhaps that will ultimately be the biggest lesson learned
Bioscience
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popularly called the desert bighorn or borrego cimarrónand have them write about it. Have them write from makeshift blinds or from behind a gun barrel. Have them write while walking across the
Cabeza Prieta at night, or while flying over it trying to radio-collar the creatures. Have them write from actual sightings of the animals or simply from their tracks and droppings.
What would result from such an exercise is Counting Sheep, an unusual anthology that demonstrates the range of possibilities in nature writing. While ostensibly a collection of writings
about these desert sheep that live along the U.S.-Mexico border, it also represents an attempt to broaden the scope of the natural history essay.
Writers trained in a wide range of disciplines spanning the natural and social sciences here offer a similarly diverse collection of writings, with women's, Hispanic, and Native American views
complementing those in a genre long dominated by Anglo men. The four sections of the anthology comprise pre-Anglo-American tradition, examples of early nature writing, varied responses by modern
writers to actually counting sheep, and a selection of essays that place bighorns in the context of the larger world.
Counting Sheep celebrates the diversity of cultural responses to this single animal species in its Sonoran Desert habitat and invites readers to change the way in which they view their
relationship to wild creatures everywhere. It also shows how nature writers can delight us all by the varied ways in which they practice their craft.
Contributors: Charles Bowden David E. Brown Bill Broyles Julian Hayden William T. Hornaday Paul Krausman Danny Lopez Eric Mellink Mauricio Mixco Gale Monson Gary Paul
Nabhan Doug Peacock Kermit Roosevelt Harley G. Shaw Charles Sheldon Peter Steinhart Anita Alvarez de Williams Terry Tempest Williams Ann Zwinger
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