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Ask Now the Beasts: Our Kinship with Animals Wild and Domestic
 
 
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Ask Now the Beasts: Our Kinship with Animals Wild and Domestic [Paperback]

Ruth Rudner (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2006
We connect with animals on many levels, whether walking a dog, riding a horse, observing gorillas at the zoo, playing with a teddy bear as a child, or even simply watching them on TV and in movies. We call our sports teams Wolverines, Bobcats, Grizzlies, and Panthers. We can be gentle as a dove, fierce as a grizzly, or as agile as a cat. Some of us may even dream of being reborn as a different species. We typically accept these connections for what they are, taking for granted what is really a remarkable — and necessary — part of our existence. In Ask Now the Beasts, acclaimed nature writer Ruth Rudner explores the eternal and complicated connections between humans and animals. In a series of true stories about her own interactions and observations of some of the many animals that have crossed her path, she writes about the powerful ways that animals interact with us spiritually, activate our imaginations, and tie us to the ancient past. Moving between domestic and wild, Rudner finds meaning and appreciation for the way in which each animal exists fully in its own world — and how that world relates to ours.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The author of these heartwarming essays writes, "All my life I have wondered what it feels like to be a horse." Rudner (A Chorus of Buffalo) has driven for hours to find a homeless dog, lost her heart to a pack mule and fallen in love with a baby gorilla because she believes that connecting with animals, whether domestic or wild, is as important as connecting with people. Rudner cites a passage in the book of Job: "But ask now the Beasts/ And they shall teach thee," and she demonstrates the wisdom of this by telling of the experiences she has had with dogs, cats, coyotes, wolves and other animals, showing how they have changed her life. For example, from her horse she learned to deal with an unfamiliar obstacle in the road—it's difficult at first but in the end "simply a step on a path." By watching a colony of penguins, she learned to accept that death is a fundamental part of life. Her compelling message is that because we share our planet with the animals, it's important to seek connections with them so that we may learn how to live in balance with the natural order of things. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From the Publisher

Ruth Rudner, author of the acclaimed A Chorus of Buffalo, offers an astonishing and beautiful meditation on how we relate to animals: sometimes loving, sometimes misguided, often exploitive, often with genuine concern. At the heart of these interactions is but one desire: a longing for connection. As Rudner says, "There is a wish to be involved in an animal's life, to identify with it, to somehow be seen by the animal or as the animal. To be loyal as an old dog, fast as a thoroughbred, agile as a cat."

Capturing the powerful ways that animals interact with us spiritually, activate our imaginations, and tie us to our own ancient beginnings, Rudner finds meaning and appreciation for the way in which each animal exists fully in its own world--and how that world relates to ours. Whether or not we love animals or are unsure of them, Ask Now the Beasts is a clarion call for us to recognize our kinship with animals both wild and domestic, to always question our relationship with the other creatures who inhabit this planet in an ongoing essential quest to understand ourselves and our nature.

Praise for Ask Now the Beasts:

"You don't have to live with dogs or horses, backpack in the wilderness or stay at a raptor center to be totally beguiled by this vivid book. Rudner writes unsentimentally but with true sentiment about a wide variety of creatures--falcons, seals, penguins, coyotes, bears, even gorillas--to say nothing of dogs she has loved to the ends of their lives. Horses are everywhere in these pages, patiently serving in pack trains and under saddle. And they are also at liberty, galloping joyously across their open spaces, pure grace in motion. Pure grace in motion is how I see this fine book." --Maxine Kumin, Pulitzer Prize winning poet, author of Jack and Other New Poems

"Here are spirited stories from a woman who follows animals with the wise eye of her heart. Rudner speaks for all of us who cherish interspecies kinship: 'It is not anthropomorphizing to fall in love,' she writes. 'It is simply falling in love.' An inspiring and life-giving book." --Brenda Peterson, author Build Me an Ark: A Life with Animals

"Ruth Rudner is a writer of breathtaking sweep. In these pages, she writes with brilliance and wisdom about what really matters: the connection between people and the rest of animate creation. Whether she is showing us how to pull a string of mules, or how a peregrine falcon brought her the sky, every one of her stories surprises with shocking beauty and timeless truth. I read this book in one sitting, but will continue to think about her words for a very long time." --Sy Montgomery, author-swineherd, The Good Good Pig: The Extraordinary Life of Christopher Hogwood

"It is not necessarily rare to encompass fact with feeling. But Ruth Rudner encompasses both, and with wisdom...Ask Now the Beasts is a thoroughly engaging read." --Bernd Heinrich, author of Mind of the Raven and Winter World

"One of the warmest, most charming, generous, humorous books about animals I have read. Like listening in on a lovely, lively, passionate fireside chat about animals with a wise and kindly and keen observer." --Jeffrey Masson, PhD, author of When Elephants Weep: The Emotional Lives of Animals


Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Da Capo Press (June 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1569243883
  • ISBN-13: 978-1569243886
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,950,277 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

In Everyday Mind, Thich Nhat Hanh writes "If you look deeply into the palm of your hand, you will see your parents and all generations of your ancestors. . . .Each is present in your body. You are the continuation . . ."

So, my biography is not just mine, but a continuation of all that has happened since that initial explosion of energy that created the possibility for everything; that created all my ancestors - amoeba, morganucodon (early mammal), grandmother. I like that idea because that's what writing is - an explosion of energy that creates everything. Writing, dance, music, art of every sort. It is why, for an artist, nothing is fixed. You cannot create out of stasis. Yet, you must be still. Stillness and energy--the same dynamic, the same connection to the universe.

Are the places I choose to live, then, some kind of reflection of my ancestor's dreams? Or do they constitute a purely personal part of my biography, a kind of sidetrack along a continuum, places that birth the particular creative energy I need at any given time. I think these places define me as much as anything can.

When I went to New York for my first co-op job as an Antioch College student, I was in love with New York, its streets, its architecture, neighborhoods, the lives of its artists, its intellectual energy. Craving intimacy with it all, I lived there for years once I finished school. Then, needing mountains, a world of nature my father gave me, I moved to Innsbruck. Austria provided an ideal combination of civilization and high mountains. I could ski (indeed, had to, since I was writing for Ski Magazine at the time), climb, hike and engage with the literature and music of a language I love. Years later I was assigned a ski story in Montana. Although I had once spent a winter in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the next state south, I had never considered Montana. It seemed too remote to me, too wild. Yet, flying over the prairie toward the front range of mountains, I knew before the plane landed I would stay. Here were mountains, the wide open space of the plains, and my own language. (Living in another language is freeing, perhaps because you are allowed mistakes. But your native tongue is precious, an access to your own mind, and to your soul.)

Most important to me, I was hungry - finally--for wildness. In the Alps there is a wildness of weather and terrain, but wildlife that can eat you was hunted out a long time ago. The wildness you feel when you live where there are grizzly bears is different. It demands of you alertness. You are aware. Awake. All of life becomes larger, grander, more present. (Living in New York, or any of the world's great cities, requires equal awareness. Just different outfits.) Montana's wildness insists you be up to it. I wanted to be tested. And to pass the test. (I think I also wanted the romance of the American West, although that's less easy to admit.) A psychic I spoke with after I had lived in Montana about a year said to me, "You had to come here to be born."

Is this what my ancestors sought? A place to be born? A place that was theirs? Don't we all seek that? What is it that I continue? How did all these generations in the palm of my hand imagine life? Can I enter into their imagination? Is all biography a question?

Visit me at ruthrudner.com

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent essays, November 22, 2007
This review is from: Ask Now the Beasts: Our Kinship with Animals Wild and Domestic (Paperback)
This book is a collection of 23 short essays. Each essay is about a particular experience the author had. As the title suggest, these experiences involve animals. The animals in this book include dogs, horses, and cats--familiar to any reader. But then there were the more exotic animals, such as penguins and walruses that she encountered in Antarctica. Other animals that appeared in her essays include gorillas, mules, coyotes, hawks, ducks, and wolves.

Two things about the author become apparent right away.

First, she's an accomplished writer. Her grammar is flawless (such an oddity, these days), her composition is clear, and her writing style is engaging. This is perhaps why her work has appeared in several major newspapers and magazines, and perhaps why she has other books to her credit.

The second thing is her respect for animals. For example, she respects horses as individuals. None of the essays revolve around generalized notions, such as "love the planet." All of them revolve around Runder's thoughts and feelings in her encounters with various individual animals. Some of these were domestic, some were wild. All were respected.

In many of the essays, Rudner reveals a lesson the animal taught her. In others, she just observes without feeling a need to draw any lesson at all. Some of the essays are quite touching, for example when Rudner reveals the joy of holding a baby gorilla or when she fondly recalls her special relationship with her dog Blue.

A few of the essays are sad, as when Rudner shares her heartache over losing two horses during a summer storm. She ponders how an animal can be living and vital one minute, and simply dead the next.

Rudner frequently talks about the relationship between life and death, and how they are intertwined. She observed this in such brutal environments as Antarctica and in such familiar environments as her own backyard.

Another thing that Rudner frequently talks about is personally connecting with the animals she encounters. She sees them as the living, feeling creatures that they are. And knowing this, they respond to her. If you are the kind of person who orders the family dog about, you won't understand this. If, on the other hand, you are the kind of person who interacts with that dog and understands exactly what the dog is saying to you, then you also understand the kinship theme that underlies these essays.

If you are that first person, consider this book essential for your personal growth. If you approach it with open eyes, what you learn could enrich your life on many levels.

If you are that second person, you will enjoy this book because it will resonate with you. It'll probably bring back memories of your own wonderful interactions with the animals you've encountered. In my case, I fondly recalled the time I was tending my garden and a robin hen perched only a few feet from me. She looked right at me and sang one lovely song after another. I sat quietly and listened. Perhaps you have had similar encounters of your own.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoughly enjoyed this book and its beasts, August 6, 2006
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This review is from: Ask Now the Beasts: Our Kinship with Animals Wild and Domestic (Paperback)
A lovely book. I laughed and cried. The author's descriptions of places and animals are beautiful and amusing-- such as rhapsodizing about Donkeys' ears. I wished there had been photos of her with some of her "beasts"
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WE DROVE INTO the parking area at Hilltop, Arizona, in the early dark of late November. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
rio grande zoo, other gorillas, hack box, round pen
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New Mexico, Old Faithful, Mama Cat, The Peregrine Fund, Third Ward, New York, Crystal Bench, Lamar Valley, Solitary Geyser, Andrews Bay, Corrales Bosque, Elephant Island, Pelican Valley, South Georgia, Cooke City, Glen Pass, Kearsarge Pass, Mechanics Institute
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