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The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape
 
 
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The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape [Hardcover]

Lisa Couturier (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 2, 2005
A debut essay collection by one of the best new nature writers

“It’s been a while since I stopped being surprised by nature in New York City, which is, after all, simply a name we’ve given this landscape—a label meaningless to the birds, the turtles, the river.”

As a child in suburban Maryland, Lisa Couturier spent all her time outdoors, playing with snakes and toads and exploring every inch of what nature offered. Her parents were convinced that she would head out West as an adult, in search of wild lands and animals. Instead, Couturier moved to New York City, and it was there that she began to see nature and all the creatures in it with new eyes.

In The Hopes of Snakes, Couturier brings together the best of her essays on urban and suburban nature throughout the Northeast, from Washington, D.C., to Boston. She writes of the things in nature that we typically love, like the power and beauty of the Potomac River or the majesty of a peregrine falcon soaring above a skyscraper, but she also celebrates the animals we either ignore or consider pests, such as geese, snakes, and crows. Nature is often invisible to people amidst the concrete and glass of dense urban life. But Couturier’s sharp eye and deep humanity have found what is so remarkable in city nature and illuminated it for readers like no one before her.

The Hopes of Snakes is an eloquent and powerful debut by one of the best writers exploring nature in the humanized landscape today.

"Lisa Couturier's essays shine with her candor, her perception, and her affection for the creatures of our world, especially with their difficult encounters on our endless roads and in our inhospitable towns and cities. Whether the subject is a snake or a falcon or a crow named Edgar, these essays will both enlighten and give much reading pleasure." —Mary Oliver

"Lisa Courturier has crafted a collection of essays that is, quite simply, stunning. The Hopes of Snakes takes readers into the lives and hearts of city creatures---those animals who persist in spite of us, and who call us back to our wild souls again and again from the dustiest of ledges, the dirtiest of cracks, the murkiest of city waterways. With respect and deep sensitivity, Courturier has crafted out of her life stories a guidebook back to those relational roots that sustain us through the most paved-over aspects of human life. I loved this book---loved getting to know each pigeon, each turtle, each falcon along with a colorful human cast of characters wise enough to treat these creatures as relatives. This book is a keeper, a teacher." —Susan Chernak McElroy, author of Animals as Teachers and Healers

"The Hopes of Snakes is a book full of rapture, mystery and surprise. I LOVE this book. Snakes DO have hopes, Lisa Couturier tells us, and that's just the first of her revelatory observations, many of which will take your breath away as surely as the glimpse of an owl in the city, or the voice of coyote in the backyard. Let this lyrical, extraordinary book lure you into the urban thickets and vales of foxes, vultures, coyotes, serpents and geese--and inspire you to recapture the wild heart that keeps us truly alive." —Sy Montgomery, author of Search for the Golden Moon Bear

“In this brilliant new book, Lisa Couturier offers readers a resonant and uplifting meditation upon the natural landscape. The author and her publisher are to be congratulated for producing a book that belongs in any library, public or private, that aspires to be complete on the subject of nature writing. In her mastery of the essay as an expressive form, and in the power and sincerity of her thinking, Lisa Couturier has established herself as the literary equal of such contemporary luminaries as Linda Hogan, Diane Ackerman and Barbara Kingsolver.” —John A. Murray, editor of the American Nature Writing series





Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Well traveled and well versed in science, first-timer Couturier is most passionate about the vital emotional connection one feels with the small wildlands of home. In these moving essays on the wild creatures of New York City and Washington, D.C., she offers sharply observed encounters with suburban foxes and urban herons (the former patrol a D.C. golf course, keeping the population of Canada geese in check and "playfully pouncing on golf balls as they roll by"), and she's equally enthusiastic about animals as mundane as crows and pigeons. She also addresses the ways in which our relationships with wildlife go astray, whether it's a plague of roaches in her apartment building or the ubiquitous human impulse to torture snakes. Particularly moving is an essay on women, wilderness and fear, in which she writes about learning to track the bullies who preyed on her brother by the sounds of the birds fleeing them. At her best, Couturier enters the terrain staked out by Annie Dillard in Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and Terry Tempest Williams in Refuge. She makes a convincing case that a suburban woman with a toddler can have as viable a relationship with the wild as an intrepid backpacker; she does not so much domesticate the wilderness as reveal the wildness within the domestic.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School–This is not a saccharine, anthropomorphic view of nature, but it is a very personal one. When she was a small child, the author's father encouraged her to use her eyes and ears in exploring the wonders of the outdoors. In her teens and 20s, the natural world captured her mind and heart as well. She is both a journalist and a trained observer who has assisted biologists in work as varied as banding peregrine falcons in Manhattan and tracking black racers (snakes) relocated in an old airfield in Brooklyn. Much like Annie Dillard's in Teaching a Stone to Talk (HarperCollins, 1992), Couturier's prose seamlessly weaves together her passion for the environment, her relationships with professionals, and her life experience. These lyrical and engaging essays, ranging in time from her childhood to that of her young daughter's, are based on a multitude of experiences with wildlife, chiefly in the New York City metropolitan area and in Washington, D.C. and its suburbs. Teens will be encouraged by these stand-alone essays to study the world around them.–Molly Connally, Chantilly Regional Library, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 159 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press; First Edition edition (January 2, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807085642
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807085646
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,800,009 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Lisa Couturier currently is working on a book about the treatment of horses in America, the research from which formed her investigative and narrative essay, "Dark Horse," which appeared in the July/August 2010 issue of ORION magazine and which won an esteemed 2012 Pushcart Prize and was nominated for the Grantham Prize for Environmental Writing. Couturier's first book, "The Hopes of Snakes & Other Tales from the Urban Landscape" (Beacon Press, 2005/2006) explores the intersecting stories of the human and nonhuman in the urbanized environments of New York City and Washington, D.C., and has been described as "an eloquent and powerful debut by one of the best new writers exploring nature in the humanized landscape." Throughout her career, Couturier has taken particular interest in stories about animals and the conflicts wildlife face, such as: the diminishing orangutan population due to deforestation in Borneo; the loss of dolphins due to tuna fishing; the roundups of wild horses due to BLM policies; and the conflict over wolf reintroduction in the U.S., among others. Couturier's work has been published in many anthologies and national magazines, including "ORION: Nature, Culture, Place"; "E: The Environmental Magazine"; "Isotope: A Magazine of Literary Nature and Science Writing"; the "American Nature Writing" series, and National Geographic's "Heart of a Nation: Writers and Photographers Inspired by the American Landscape." Her work has earned national recognition. Listed as a notable essayist in "Best American Essays, 2006," and "Best American Essays, 2011," Couturier has been a guest on several National Public Radio programs, including "All Things Considered," the "Diane Rehm Show," and "Living on Earth," and she has been featured in USA Today, The Washington Post, and PEOPLE magazine. She holds a degree in journalism from the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland and a master's degree from New York University. She lives with her family and horses on an Agricultural Reserve in Maryland.

Please visit her website: http://www.lisacouturier.com.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MORE THAN NATURE: A GREAT AND TIMELESS READ, February 23, 2005
This review is from: The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape (Hardcover)
"THE HOPES OF SNAKES" is a great and timeless read. These essays may remind one of Edward Albee's tension provoking plays and of David Sedaris's dark humor. The essay 'Take the Long Way Home' can sit right next to that provocative genre of southern writers--right next to Faulkner's "AS I LAY DYING" or maybe "LIGHT IN AUGUST." You can roll Couturier's words and descriptive phrases over your tongue like a sweet mint julep. These essays tangle and weave classic coming-of-age tales through muddy swamps, over rocky shores, and into dark and scary woods to bring us to the point where an enlightened woman with an inclination for the wild can thrive in Manhattan and then return to Washington, DC, to enjoy the roots of an ancestral home and the blessings of motherhood. Couturier trades primeval forests for concrete canyons, but the message is an ancient and ongoing one. Anyone can read this book, but it will take a thoughtful reader to grasp and appreciate Couturier's depth. Don't pigeonhole this group of essays into a nice, neat urban nature read. It is so much more. The writing is likely to spring at you and bite you like a coiled and sleeping snake that's been poked and provoked.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Have You Ever Read a Book You Wished Would Never End?, April 4, 2005
By 
CP (VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape (Hardcover)
The Hopes of Snakes is just such a book. From Manhattan to Washington, DC, Lisa Couturier takes her readers on an amazing journey by introducing us to things we may have taken for granted or may never have thought twice (or even once) about. As I have been reading the essays, my family and friends have had to endure my reading passages or quoting from the text, but none acted as though it were much of a struggle because the prose so ably draws one in.

Ms. Couturier not only writes with the beauty of a poet, she teaches along the way so that the reader comes away feeling thoughtful and enriched. I knew nothing about crows other than myths, but now, because I have read A Banishment of Crows, I look for them in the sky, count their numbers, am awed by and respect them.

In her essay, The Hopes of Snakes, she becomes the readers' hero because she does what we wish we could do in similar circumstances.

The essays reflect humor and sorrow and never shy away from the unpleasant. By the end, the reader closes the book, feeling fulfilled by the journey, and yet compelled to assert onself more fully in the environment so that not a moment is lost and the connection will remain.

I have hopes that this will be the first of many books by Lisa Couturier.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Living with our fellow creatures, April 6, 2005
This review is from: The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape (Hardcover)
Lisa writes about her experiences with wildlife that occupy cities and suburbia and how they interact with humans. As Lisa writes, some animals fare very well while others do not.

Lisa's ability to capture small details about the cirtters with whom she interacts make her essays all the more endearing and important. Although accused of anthropomorphising about the surivivors of the Human onslaught, her descriptions present an important understanding of urban wildlife and enable many otherwise unknowing citydwellers the opportunity to engage with nature's cast outs.

As Julie Warner said in Doc Hollywood: "Most people are merely on the Earth, not a part of it." Lisa Couturier gives us the opportunity to experience first hand those rare species that share their world with the Human invaders.
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The story is told in my family that when I was a year old my parents took me to the beach at Sandy Hook, New Jersey, which from the shoreline has a view of Manhattan. Read the first page
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East River, Potomac River, United States, Central Park, Rock Creek, Arthur Kill, Father Charles, Mattie Libre, New Jersey, Rockville Pike, East Coast, Hudson River, North American, Great Falls, Little Falls, Montrose Road, Roosevelt Island, Sugarloaf Mountain, Civil War, Fifth Avenue, Park Avenue, South American, White Flint Mall
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