“An impressively thoughtful and artful collection. The pieces in Wildness are engaging and often lyrical, maintaining a kind of authorial intimacy throughout; collectively they work well to advance the book’s timely theme of the wild as a human condition. Brimming with strong and original voices, this is a top-flight anthology that takes an old idea and makes it new, hip, and fresh.”
— Ben A. Minteer, Arizona State University, coeditor of "After Preservation: Saving American Nature in the Age of Humans"
“This amazing amalgam goes at the issue of nature, wildness, and our relationships to it via personal story, lyrical verse, and reflection. It is a return to something that works most effectively—a diversity of noteworthy voices tuned to a single issue—but that is so diverse in its assemblage and affect as to be totally unique and useful. Comprehensive, inclusive, and evocative, comfortable enough to be considered literature but groundbreaking enough to enter into discussions of policy and planning for the future, Wildness is storytelling and word-singing at its best. It is also a book I simply (and badly) want on my bookshelf to pull down and read words that flow like water but have the lasting impact of fire.”
— J. Drew Lanham, Clemson University, author of “The Home Place: Memoirs of a Colored Man's Love Affair with Nature”
"I have gone from trail-builder to solitary cabin-dweller to husband and father. Now, as I carry Winter Eve across our spring hillside, I want my daughter to know the wilderness outside our cabin, and the wildness within each of us. And that is why on my cabin’s rough-hewn shelves, Wildness . . . [has] found a home beside my Colorado Trail Guidebook, there to teach me to live beside wild lands, to turn toward wildness, in partnership with my wife and our daughter, so that we may learn from her (and our) native self-will."
— Sean Prentiss, High Country News
"The essays in this volume navigate a path that scans from the ground up, telling stories about real people in real places, across the landscape continuum, from formally designated wilderness areas to densely populated urban neighborhoods. Wildness is storytelling at its best. One of the other things that sets this book apart from other books on wilderness and wildness is that there's a tremendous diversity. Storytelling authors were asked to further elaborate on the personal or emotionally compelling moments showing what wildness means to them. This reviewer finds that this unique book is a success."
— Robert C. Harriss, Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development
"Guaranteed to renew your promise to purpose. . . . For anyone who reads magazines like Orion or, heck New Territory, you’ll enjoy a trove of thoughtful reflection in Wildness. A collection of essays—with bylines from the globally beloved (Vandana Shiva; Joel Salatin) and up-and-coming Midwestern writers (Margo Farnsworth of Missouri; Gavin Van Horn of Illinois)—breathes fresh light on how to articulate your human place in this wild world."
— New Territory
"Wildness is a collection of essays about humans and our relationship to nature. What is the meaning of 'wild' in the United States? In Enrique Salmon’s 'No Word,' he discusses how there is no word for wild in his native language of Rarámuri. There’s no setting aside the world of human and the world of the wild. It’s a beautiful essay about the importance of how language divides and separates us. We are part of nature and nature is part of us. In Mistingutte Smith’s essay 'Wild Black Margins,' she discusses the intersection between African Americans and land. She talks about what is perceived as wilderness and the complicated story of land in the United States. City Creatures is another collection of essays that focuses on animals in urban environments. There are beautiful essays, photos, and comics about the animals that live amongst us."
— Elisa Shoenberger, Book Riot
"What does it mean to be wild in times of rising global temperatures and rampant social inequality? Is wildness rural or urban? Is it something to be embraced, even cultivated, or feared and rejected as a Western colonialist intellectual construct? Is wildness a revolutionary politics, or something more reformist, even centrist? These are some of the questions at the heart of an important new volume of essays, Wildness: Relations of People and Place."
— Daegan Miller, Edge Effects
"Makes a compelling argument for understanding that wildness is not a quality that exists independently of human beings. Rather, it is the essence of ecological relationships. Though we have grown estranged, these relationships include human beings, and Wildness serves as an invitation to reclaim our place within the relational wild. Its relevance to ecologists is to reframe the roll of ecological science not merely as a system of generating knowledge about ecosystems but, through that knowledge, to illuminate our intrinsic bonds with wild systems—both where we have failed those bonds and where we might be of greater service to them. It offers no final answer but instead circumambulates and runs transects through the wild to survey the diversity of perspectives, allowing the reader to find their own way within it."
— Jason Kirkey, Ecology
"There can be many different and contrasting definitions of wild. Often for ecologists, wild has a positive meaning; it is a sort of synonym for healthy or pristine. For others, wild indicates, as it did for the first European settlers in North America, a place that has not been exploited and must be converted into a familiar landscape. Collected in this book are many definitions of wild, but rather than discussing different points of view, it tries to break the artificial, mental barrier that divides us from nature by emphasizing the archetypical link between humans and nature."
— Conservation Biology