“The essays, stories, art, poetry, and photography in City Creatures convey one insight after another about modern life, and in particular offer ideas about ethics, the importance of place, displaced species, the diversity of life, religious practice and thinking, and the role of literature and other arts in helping us see our daily lives. Human city dwellers will see their world far better and recognize how to stop harming their local habitat and their fellow urban 'citizens,' building toward coexistence with their nonhuman neighbors.”
— Paul Waldau, author of Animal Studies: An Introduction
"A fascinating collection of thoughtful insights in the richly diverse and surprisingly pulsing urban nature of one of the world’s most busy cities. This vivid and passionate book opens our eyes to the wealth of animal life that regularly goes unnoticed in the hustling and bustling of the everyday. The animals we share our city with occupy different urban spaces, geographical areas, and institutional domains as their fleeting presences are captured in this book by essayists, poets, and artists. With its emphasis on local realities and histories, City Creatures sets the model for the eco-urban engagement this decade so urgently needs."
— Giovanni Aloi, editor in chief of Antennae: The Journal of Nature in Visual Culture and lecturer in modern and contemporary art at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago
"Chicago wilderness? Who knew what fabulous creatures you may encounter there! There has never been another book that celebrates so beautifully the ways wild creatures can be encountered in the midst of the asphalt grids and windy shores of this most American of cities."
— David Rothenberg, author of Survival of the Beautiful and Bug Music
"City Creatures is a collection of essays, artwork, and poetry from over 50 contributors. It exuberantly spans subjects from the spiritual benefits and moral issues around keeping chickens in the backyard to the unsung contributions of soil mites. We learn about orchid sex and the resurrection of frozen frogs. A scientist gives us a glimpse into the secret lives of urban coyotes. There’s a step-by-step description of taxidermy. We are treated to charming accounts of meetings with owls, parrots, skunks, snakes and other animal neighbors, and a haunting glimpse of herons on the concrete-lined banks of a polluted stream. The authors take us bird-watching, snake-hunting, dog-walking, and into Chicago’s museums and zoos. The book is about the wildlife of Chicago, but the subjects extend well beyond.
After reading City Creatures I was left feeling the strong collective impact of all of those voices. The stories were informative or intimate or funny or sad or all of these things. What I found most unique and unexpected was the book’s emotional content. I was touched. I literally laughed and cried, diving forward into each new story, genuinely interested to hear about the next person’s wildlife experiences."
— Julie Feinstein, author of Field Guide to Urban Wildlife
"A fascinating and beautiful book linking ecology, anthropology, spirituality, prose, art and poetry that urges us to rediscover our relationship with urban animals. Chicago provides an ideal background for this elegant and engaging examination of how animals and nature can reconnect us back to our own humanity; addressing essential and universal questions for all city-dwellers in this modern age."
— Beatrix Beisner, coeditor of Nature All Around Us
"Nature in Chicago is everywhere and for everyone. Read this book for its symphony of voices."
— Bernd Heinrich, author of The Homing Instinct and Life Everlasting
“[A] vivid and detailed depiction of Chicago’s natural world. . . . The book’s marriage of personal experience with historical record makes for an engaging read. The artwork included is as vibrant and awe-inspiring as the city itself.”
— Chicago Tonight
"An outstanding compilation of essays, poetry, photographs and art. . . . After finishing this book, among the questions one asks is how can we take better, more proactive care of the natural world that’s intertwined throughout our urban infrastructure and how can we enjoy that world more fully?”
— Newcity
“This fascinating look at wilderness through literature and art will be relished by Chicago area readers. The topics will also resonate with anyone who enjoys natural history and looks to find nature in their own backyard.”
— Library Journal
“INCREDIBLE. . . . A collection of stories, poems, drawings, and photographs contributed by numerous Chicago artists, scientists, and residents, it whisks the reader through the streets, parks, and history of the Chicago region, giving a perspective on the city’s relationship with nature that is at once complete, nuanced, detailed, entertaining, and surprisingly intimate.”
— Nature of Cities
"There is something here for everyone: poems, personal essays, histories, marvelous reproductions of paintings, photographs and drawings. From monk parakeets in Hyde Park to animals in zoos and museums, alley cats to alewives to coyotes to migrating cranes, this book brings the nature that's all around us into sharp focus."
— Chicago Tribune
“As the perfect antidote to the sense of powerlessness that sometimes characterizes our inability to prevent mass extinction or amend catastrophic eco-disasters, this book shows us how eco-awareness can start on a small scale through caring for the animals we encounter in our neighborhoods, our backyards, and on our doorsteps.”
— Antennae