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Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia
 
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Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia [Hardcover]

Stephen DeStefano (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 15, 2010

A moose frustrates commuters by wandering onto the highway; a cougar stalks his prey through suburban backyards; an alligator suns himself in a strip mall parking lot. Such stories, which regularly make headline news, highlight the blurred divide that now exists between civilization and wilderness.

In Coyote at the Kitchen Door, Stephen DeStefano draws on decades of experience as a biologist and conservationist to examine the interplay between urban sprawl and wayward wildlife. As he explores what our insatiable appetite for real estate means for the health and wellbeing of animals and ourselves, he highlights growing concerns, such as the loss of darkness at night because of light pollution. DeStefano writes movingly about the contrasts between constructed and natural environments and about the sometimes cherished, sometimes feared place that nature holds in our modern lives, as we cluster into cities yet show an increasing interest in the natural world.

Woven throughout the book is the story of one of the most successful species in North America: the coyote. Once restricted to the prairies of the West, this adaptable animal now inhabits most of North America—urban and wild alike. DeStefano traces a female coyote’s movements along a winding path between landscapes in which her species learned to survive and flourish. Coyote at the Kitchen Door asks us to rethink the meaning of progress and create a new suburban wildlife ethic.

(20100116)


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

In 2006, a coyote named Hal turned up in Central Park, evading park rangers and the NYPD for two whole days while underscoring the coyote’s increasing prevalence in the population-dense Northeast. As adaptable as they are surreptitious, coyotes particularly love the suburbs, where food is abundant and natural predators rare. For wildlife biologist DeStefano, the coyote is thus an inspirational symbol of nature’s resilience: a wild animal that has learned to thrive amid human sprawl without our consent and in spite of our perennial efforts to banish them from our midst. Narrating the travels of a plucky female coyote, the author explores humans’ evolving relationship with nature and the violence of our light, noise, and traffic. Along the way, he offers us a glimpse at his own restless spirit, born in the Boston suburbs but drawn to the desert Southwest; resentful of human wastefulness yet exhilarated by the open road. DeStefano’s willingness to probe his own ambivalence about the possibilities of coexistence with nature allows this selection to be about much more than just wild canines. --Brendan Driscoll

Review

At home in town as well as in the wild, DeStefano gives a lively and insightful, deeply personal account of the tensions between the two as development encroaches relentlessly on the natural world. Nature is what we make it, and has been for a long time. It's just that the stakes are higher now for us and for wild life. Meanwhile, the coyote--unaware of our misgivings about what we have wrought--goes about the business of surviving in the suburban landscape.
--Richard M. DeGraaf, Chief Research Wildlife Biologist (Emeritus), U. S. Forest Service (20100201)

This is a delightful book. DeStefano takes you on an intimate journey across town and through back yards, discovering and enjoying our wild suburban neighbors. Since most of us live in suburbs, it's probably time we got to know them better. When such exciting entertainment is so close, why not enjoy!
--Richard L. Knight, Professor of Wildlife Conservation, Colorado State University (20100318)

Through the lens of a thoughtful human, the suburbs represent a tragic misallocation of resources. But through the lens of coyote, suburbia is just another place to thrive on a planet transformed by humanity. As DeStefano describes in witty, factual, down-to-earth prose, the trickster feasts on our accidental treats, constantly letting us know that, if we are to live with the coyote at the kitchen door, it will be on her terms, not ours.
--Guy R. McPherson, Professor Emeritus, University of Arizona School of Natural Resources & the Environment and Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology (20100405)

Urban ecologist Stephen DeStefano's day job routinely involves man-handling moose--and deer, beavers and bears--that have ventured into territory now claimed by humans. His fear is that as the human population continues to rise, land once available for wildlife is being commandeered for housing, roads and shopping malls. As our settlements sprawl, wild animals become "pests." In Coyote at the Kitchen Door, DeStefano challenges that arrogant mindset. He vividly describes the wonder of his encounters with wild animals in wild places, and grippingly conveys why even suburban coyotes deserve respect.
--Gail Vines (New Scientist 20100101)

DeStefano weaves personal stories of his own wild encounters with scientific evidence on the negative effects that light, noise, traffic, road building and other human activities have on the wild animals in our midst. As the book unfolds, readers are drawn into his questions and are called to rethink "our overwhelming occupation of the landscape."
--Lyanda Lynn Haupt (Los Angeles Times Book Review 20100902)

DeStefano, a wildlife biologist, examines the expanding field of "urban ecology" in this pithy volume. Urban ecologists study changes in human--animal interactions caused by factors like sprawl, traffic, and noise pollution, in an attempt to understand why some species (the mountain lion, say) are badly disrupted by human developments, while others, such as the coyote, appear to be thriving--turning up in more and more Eastern back yards. DeStefano cites some alarming facts: in the past half--century, the average size of the American home has grown from nine hundred and eighty--three square feet to twenty--three hundred and fifty; the mere presence of a paved road alters the ecosystem for three hundred feet on either side of it. But, having experienced the benefits of a suburban childhood, he refuses to reduce his thinking to a view in which wilderness preservation is the only solution. (New Yorker )

This book is about a topic that matters--our engagement with the land and its animals. The coyote is not just the trickster. It is part of the stories that suggest how we should behave for the sake of our own futures.
--Jules Pretty (Times Higher Education )

A highly readable and thought-provoking work in which DeStefano takes us into his world and the world of the wildlife he admires. It also is the world in which we must live because we created it--but we also can change it if we work at it.
--Mae Woods Bell (Rocky Mount Telegram )

Narrating the travels of a plucky female coyote, the author explores humans' evolving relationship with nature and the violence of our light, noise, and traffic. Along the way, he offers us a glimpse at his own restless spirit, born in the Boston suburbs but drawn to the desert Southwest; resentful of human wastefulness yet exhilarated by the open road. DeStefano's willingness to probe his own ambivalence about the possibilities of coexistence with nature allows this selection to be about much more than just wild canines.
--Brendan Driscoll (Booklist )

Reading this book will help you better understand coyotes and what may be going through the mind of Wile E. Coyote & Co. It also helps you understand the omnivorous and highly adaptive coyote, which are real survivors. Stefano ultimately calls for a new suburban wildlife ethic of coexistence, and people who habituate coyotes and other wildlife, should read what he has to say.
--James Swan (ESPNOutdoors.com )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (January 15, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674035569
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674035560
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #147,279 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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 (4)
4 star:
 (1)
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Coyote is a great story, worth the read...., December 26, 2009
By 
David H. Small (Athol "Almont", Ma) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia (Hardcover)
Stephen weaves tales of his life's work as a wildlife biologist and brings it home to our own backyard. From Polar Bears in Churchill, Condors in Peru to the Coyote down the block. This is a well written and interesting perspective on our place on the planet, our wild neighbors, and our continued relationship with them.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, balanced book, January 24, 2010
This review is from: Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia (Hardcover)
This is wonderful. So balanced, so insightful on the state of our wild and urbanized world meshing together. Well written. Highly recommended.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Maybe I got the wrong copy, January 30, 2011
This review is from: Coyote at the Kitchen Door: Living with Wildlife in Suburbia (Hardcover)
Everyone else here so far has given this book five stars, so maybe I received the wrong copy. The editorial reviews suggested a book about wildlife in the suburbs, but the space in this book devoted to that topic could barely fill a pamphlet. A larger percentage of the book is dedicated to the author's autobiographical info but the bulk of the book consists of an environmentalist screed. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for environmentalism as my avocation is native botany, but that's not how the book is presented or marketed.
Granted, as an environmentalist screed this is well written and far less harsh than most and only occasionally turns accusatory, such as blaming the reader for environmental misdeeds of previous centuries (the "you and I did it" argument), or dictatorial (paraphrasing here--"I don't want to trample on anyone's rights but the world would be better off if they all did it my way" argument; which is apparently the mantra of anyone who managed to finagle more than a bachelor's degree from an institution of higher learning).
In my opinion there is a serious downside to the current trend of padding literature with an author's ideological viewpoints, no matter how benign and well presented they are or how much they will impress the author's peers.
More than one young man or woman will pick up this book, begin to read it and rather than become fascinated with wildlife and be more involved in its preservation (the supposed intention of the book), they will be presented with what they perceive as just another lecture by just another gray-hair, will put the book down and return to their video games.
But I can see why the editorial reviewers love it, because they write this way too.
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