Staff Pick
Of the many books I have read in recent years, whether fiction or non, I cannot recall a single work written with more poetic elegance than David Abram's Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology. Nearly every one of Abram's sentences shimmers with a melodious resonance that commands an unhurried pace. Abram, cultural ecologist, anthropologist, philosopher, and accomplished sleight-of-hand magician, has a rich and varied background that seems to nurture the many complementary perspectives evident in his writing. Becoming Animal explores some of the same thematic territory as his first book (1997's award-winning The Spell of the Sensuous), yet seems to have been written with deeper insight, greater cohesive focus, and more stylistic maturity.
While Abram is well aware of the pervasive and ever-accelerating unraveling of our ecosystems, it is far from being the book's locus, bearing only but the briefest of contextual mentions. Becoming Animal diverges from the rash of recent works eager to emphasize environmental degradation or offer overly simplified quick-fix, feel-good solutions, and instead offers compassionate and insightful musings on our own misplaced roles within the larger web of life. Abram relates personal tales and anecdotes that were integral to his own understanding of earthly cosmology. Abram is clearly a patient and curious observer of the animate world, often forsaking more entrenched conceptions in favor of truths discerned via his own experiential discoveries. Open-minded and humble in his knowledge, Abram even encourages the reader to make sense of what he or she themselves may have learned. "I've written this book, a spiraling series of experimental and improvisational forays, in hopes that others will try my findings against their own experience, correcting or contesting my discoveries with their own." Rare is the writer receptive to a reader's challenge of their own authorial authority.
Throughout Becoming Animal, Abram argues for a reorienting and retuning of our senses, a physical and perceptual realigning of ourselves with the natural world. Within chapters entitled "Shadow," "Wood and Stone," "Reciprocity," "Depth," "Mood," "The Speech of Things," and "Shapeshifting" (amongst others), he leads us on a meandering course through nuance and sagacity. An abundance of rich, vivid storytelling skill allows Abram to ably navigate us through to what, for many, will undoubtedly be a new way of thinking about, and engaging in, our world. Becoming Animal is a breathtaking work of both great import and timeliness. David Abram has crafted the rarest of literary gems: a sublime effort combining transcendent prose, lucid insight, and lasting consequence. Recommended By Jeremy G., Powells.com
Synopses & Reviews
David Abram’s first book, The Spell of the Sensuous has become a classic of environmental literature. Now he returns with a startling exploration of our human entanglement with the rest of nature.
As the climate veers toward catastrophe, the innumerable losses cascading through the biosphere make vividly evident the need for a metamorphosis in our relation to the living land. For too long we’ve ignored the wild intelligence of our bodies, taking our primary truths from technologies that hold the living world at a distance. Abram’s writing subverts this distance, drawing readers ever closer to their animal senses in order to explore, from within, the elemental kinship between the human body and the breathing Earth. The shape-shifting of ravens, the erotic nature of gravity, the eloquence of thunder, the pleasures of being edible: all have their place in this book.
Review
"This book is like a prehistoric cave. If you have the nerve to enter it and you get used to the dark, you'll discover things about storytelling which are startling, urgent and deeply true. Things each of us once knew, but forgot when we were born into the 19th and 20th centuries. Extraordinary rediscoveries!" John Berger
Review
"David Abram is among the most important interpreters of the wild voice within us. At no other time in Western history have we needed to listen to that voice, and David's, as much as we do today." Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder
Review
"As with many deeply original — and radical — books, this work may startle, even provoke the reader in its electric reversal of conventional thought. Worth any provocation for the profundity of its insights, this is a portrait of the artist as a young raven, arguing, with all the subtlety of his mind, for the mindedness of the body. An exercise of uncanny imagination by a writer who has a sixth sense for the intelligence of the first five." Jay Griffiths, author of Wild: An Elemental Journey
Review
"Provocative, boldly recalibrating....A creative and visionary ecologist and philosopher, Abram offers perception-heightening insights into the disastrous consequences of our increasing detachment from the living world as we funnel our attention to the cyber realm. He tells extraordinary tales of his encounters with wildlife from whales to ravens, and illuminates the planet's myriad forms of sentient life. In addition to writing with poetic precision about sensory experience — his analysis of shadows and life's reciprocity are phenomenal feats of observation and eloquence — he draws on his adventures as an itinerant sleight-of-hand magician and apprentice to indigenous shamans to forge an inspirited physics of being. Prodigious, transfixing, and rectifying." Booklist, starred review
Review
"This brave and magical book summons wild wonder to remind us who we are." Amory B. Lovins, Chief Scientist, Rocky Mountain Institute
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"David Abram's new book is so invigorating, its teachings leap off the page and translate immediately into lived experience. Shaking us free from the prisons of our mental constructions, Becoming Animal brings us home to ourselves as living organs of this wild planet." Joanna Macy, buddhist scholar and activist
Review
"If we are to survive — indeed, if we are to stop the dominant culture from killing the planet — it will be in great measure because of brave and brilliant beings like David Abram. This is a beautifully written, deeply moving, and important book." Derrick Jensen, author of Endgame and A Language Older Than Words
Review
"This startling, sparkling book challenges the technological temper of our times by returning us to the animal body in ourselves. Abram shows brilliantly how this body brings us back to Earth in a series of acutely moving descriptions of its polysensory genius. An original work of primary philosophy, it is written with verve, passion, and poetry." Edward S. Casey, author of The Fate of Place: A Philosophical History
Review
"Abram brings the magician's sense of mystery and playful surprise to these experimental and improvisational forays...his celebratory embrace of all that surrounds him is refreshing in the extreme. The author is an inspired force who invites the neglected yet ever-present serendipities of the natural world to show themselves." Kirkus
Review
"Abram's prose is lighted from within, happy, solid and clear. It's fun to read and helps the reader remember his or her place in the larger, luminous world." Los Angeles Times
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"Fascinating....Highly readable, Becoming Animal sets a new benchmark for the human appraisal of our place in the whole world." Tucson Citizen
Review
"Graceful storytelling....Abram has given us another classic that will help us ponder our future and choose our actions wisely." Greenpeace International
Review
"Crafted with poetic elegance, nearly every one of Abram's sentences shimmers with a melodious resonance that commands an unhurried pace. An abundance of rich, vivid storytelling allows Abram to ably navigate us through to what, for many, will undoubtedly be a new way of thinking about, and engaging in, our world. In Becoming Animal, Abram has crafted the rarest of literary gems: a sublime effort combining transcendent prose, lucid insight, and lasting consequence." Shambhala Sun Space
About the Author
David Abram is an ecologist, anthropologist, and philosopher who lectures and teaches widely around the world. His prior book, The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-than-Human World, helped catalyze the emergence of several new disciplines, including the burgeoning field of ecopsychology. The recipient of a Lannan Literary Award for Nonfiction, David was named by both the Utne Reader and the British journal Resurgence as one of a hundred visionaries transforming contemporary culture. His writings on the cultural causes and consequences of environmental disarray are published in numerous magazines, scholarly journals, and anthologies. A co-founder of the Alliance for Wild Ethics (AWE), David lives with his family in the foothills of the southern Rockies.