Terry Tempest Williams is the award-winning author of fifteen books, including Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place, Finding Beauty in a Broken World, When Women Were Birds, and, most recently, The Hour of Land. Her work has been widely anthologized around the world. She lives in Castle Valley, Utah, with her husband, Brooke Williams.
"There has never been a book like Refuge, an entirely original yet
tragically common story, brought exquisitely to life."
—San Francisco Chronicle
"Moving and loving... both a natural history of an ecological
phenomenon [and] a Mormon family saga... A heroic book."
—The Washington Post Book World
"A record of loss, healing grace, and the search for a human place
in nature's large design. Terry Tempest Williams's courage is
matched by the earnest beauty of her language and the keen
compassion of her observations." —Louise Erdrich
"The wonderful thing about Refuge is that Terry Williams is too
full of life herself, and too fascinated by all its manifestations,
to write a gloomy book. There isn't a page in Refuge that doesn't
whistle with the sound of wings." —Wallace Stegner
"Brilliantly conceived... one of the most significant environmental
essays of our time." —The Kansas City Star
"There has never been a book like Refuge, an entirely
original yet tragically common story, brought exquisitely to
life."
-San Francisco Chronicle
"Moving and loving... both a natural history of an
ecological phenomenon [and] a Mormon family saga... A heroic
book."
-The Washington Post Book World
"A record of loss, healing grace, and the search for a
human place in nature's large design. Terry Tempest Williams's
courage is matched by the earnest beauty of her language and the
keen compassion of her observations." -Louise Erdrich
"The wonderful thing about Refuge is that Terry Williams is
too full of life herself, and too fascinated by all its
manifestations, to write a gloomy book. There isn't a page in
Refuge that doesn't whistle with the sound of wings." -Wallace
Stegner
"Brilliantly conceived... one of the most significant
environmental essays of our time." -The Kansas City
Star
From 1982 to 1989 Williams, a naturalist in residence at the Utah Museum of Natural History, suffered two traumatic events: her mother's unsuccessful battle with cancer and the flooding of the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge by the rising waters of the Great Salt Lake. Here she attempts to come to terms with the loss of her parent and that of the birds in the refuge by juxtaposing natural history and personal tragedy, alternating her observations on each. In an epilogue that might well serve as the subject of another book, the author also maintains that her mother--and many other people in Utah--probably contracted cancer as a result of radioactive fallout from atmospheric testing of atomic weapons in Nevada in the 1950s and '60s. And she concludes that, even though it is not in the tradition of her Mormon background to question governmental authority, she must actively oppose nuclear tests in the desert. The book is a moving account of personal loss and renewal. (Oct.)
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