Settled in the Wild: Notes from the Edge of Town

Settled in the Wild: Notes from the Edge of Town

by Susan Hand Shetterly
Settled in the Wild: Notes from the Edge of Town

Settled in the Wild: Notes from the Edge of Town

by Susan Hand Shetterly

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Overview

Whether we live in cities, suburbs, or villages, we are encroaching on nature, and it in one way or another perseveres. Naturalist Susan Shetterly looks at how animals, humans, and plants share the land—observing her own neighborhood in rural Maine. She tells tales of the locals (humans, yes, but also snowshoe hares, raccoons, bobcats, turtles, salmon, ravens, hummingbirds, cormorants, sandpipers, and spring peepers). She expertly shows us how they all make their way in an ever-changing habitat.

In writing about a displaced garter snake, witnessing the paving of a beloved dirt road, trapping a cricket with her young son, rescuing a fledgling raven, or the town's joy at the return of the alewife migration, Shetterly issues warnings even as she pays tribute to the resilience that abounds. 

Like the works of Annie Dillard and Aldo Leopold, Settled in the Wild takes a magnifying glass to the wildness that surrounds us. With keen perception and wit, Shetterly offers us an education in nature, one that should inspire us to preserve it.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781565129733
Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Publication date: 01/26/2010
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 229,276
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Susan Hand Shetterly is the author of the essay collections Settled in the Wild and The New Year’s Owl, as well as several children’s books including Shelterwood, named an Outstanding Science Trade Book for Children by the Children’s Book Council. Shetterly has received a nonfiction writing grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and two grants from the Maine Arts Commission.  

Read an Excerpt

Settled in the Wild

Notes from the Edge of Town
By Susan Hand Shetterly

ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL

Copyright © 2010 Susan Hand Shetterly
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-56512-618-3


Chapter One

April Nights

I leave a window open on April nights and put my pillow close to that cold slice of air because I want to hear spring come back to this small clearing. Sometimes it snows and I hear that soft muffled falling, or it sleets and I hear instead the sharp tick of ice against the glass. But mostly the sounds are new.

One night a flock of Canada geese flew north under the half-moon. I woke to their bugling from the south and listened as the birds crossed over the roof, close enough to catch the sound of their wings like a bow drawn back and forth across the bass strings of a cello. Maybe ten geese. Maybe fifteen. An uneasy silence followed as if the thrust of their heraldic flight had upset the air behind them, as if they had broken through the glaze of winter above my house and trailed spring's upheaval and promise.

After midnight, a porcupine climbed into the weeping willow by the frog pond and started to snip off the young branches, tender and crisp with new leaves and swelling buds. I heard one branch, then another, slip through the branches below them and land on the ground with an almost inaudible sigh. Lying under a pile of quilts, I counted the falling branches. When I got to five, I forced myself up in the dark, turned on the kitchen light, and stepped outside. The light sparkled on the frosted grass beneath the tree. I was barefoot, wearing an old T-shirt. Another branch dropped as I walked in the dark to the driveway, picked up a handful of stones, and pitched them in the direction of the tree. They bounced off the trunk, splashing into the frog pond through paper-thin ice.

In the moonlight I could see the dark blob of porcupine against the sky. It was pressing itself against the trunk, about twenty-five feet up, like a big irregular fruit stuck in the branches. I tossed a few more stones.

"That's for eating my tree!" I said.

Back in bed, as clearly as if the porcupine were answering the force of my assault, I heard another branch drop.

An hour or so later, a loon flew over. It filled the night with one long cry. What the voice said was that the ice is starting to melt off the nearby lakes, almost enough to give loons the open water they need. What the voice said was that it could hardly wait.

Just before dawn, a raccoon, perhaps the first to rise from its restless winter sleep, began to sort through the shed. I must have left the door ajar. I listened as it tossed aside what was probably a wine bottle out of the recycling bin. Then the empty plastic compost bucket rolled across the shed floor. Then something heavy dropped. I wasn't sure. Maybe one of my son's old winter boots that I wear around the yard, now that he's grown up and gone.

Everything in that cold predawn was exquisitely quiet except for this one raccoon, the only soul in the universe making noise.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Settled in the Wild by Susan Hand Shetterly Copyright © 2010 by Susan Hand Shetterly. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

1. April Nights....................3
2. Going Back to the Land....................7
3. Walking at Dusk....................21
4. Sonny's Song....................25
5. Dangers....................31
6. The Inward Eye....................43
7. Elvers....................49
8. Eden....................53
9. Treasure....................55
10. Chac....................61
11. A Point of View....................81
12. The Gift....................95
13. Alewives....................101
14. The Alder Patch....................109
15. Country Road....................117
16. Letting Summer Go....................125
17. Knowing Things....................139
18. Tree....................157
19. Big Fish....................169
20. Ice....................179
21. Trapped....................183
22. Neighborhood Deer....................197
23. Jed Island....................207
24. Cormorants....................211
25. Rain....................225
26. The Fire and the Owl....................229
EPILOGUE....................237

What People are Saying About This

Richard Louv

"With wisdom and leavening humor, Susan Hand Shetterly tells tales of a small town and the woods around it, of her family and neighbors, two-legged and four, of the sound of wind and the cacophony of silence." —Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods

Terry Tempest Williams

"Graceful and resonant . . . A personal undertaking for a son who admits he never understood his unassuming, penny-pinching immigrant father, a man who spent three decades obsessively cataloging the words of his moribund mother tongue. Sabar once looked at his father with shame, scornful of the alien who still bore scars on his back from childhood bloodlettings. This book, he writes, is a chance to make amends"– New York Times Sunday Book Review

Rick Bass

"Beautiful and enchanting, ocean-deep with the revelatory powers of discovery." —Rick Bass, author of Why I Came West

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