Our wild calling How connecting with animals can transform our lives--and save theirs

Richard Louv

Book - 2019

"The author shows how cultivating the powerful, mysterious, and fragile bond between humans and other animals can improve our mental, physical, and spiritual health, protect our planet, and serve as an antidote to the loneliness of our species"--

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Subjects
Published
Chapel Hill, North Carolina : Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Louv (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
308 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781616205607
  • Introduction: A Mystery
  • Part 1. Beautiful Acts: Life-Changing Encounters with Species Not Our Own
  • 1. In the Family of Animals
  • 2. The Aching Heart
  • Species Loneliness
  • An Altered View of Human Exceptionalism
  • 3. The Mind-Altering Power of Deep Animal Connection
  • Habitat of the Heart
  • The Land of Giant Ants, an Unexpected Urchin, and a Moving Protozoan
  • Crossing Over
  • 4. The Octopus Who Stopped Time
  • Time Bending
  • Resetting Our Sense of Wonder
  • Part 2. What the Wild Heart Still Knows: The Art and Science of Communicating with Other Animals
  • 5. Becoming the Grasshopper
  • Wearing the Shoes of the Snake (Critical Anthropomorphism)
  • 6. Intimacy Is All around Us
  • Beyond the Threshold
  • Have You Ever Seen a Box Turtle Drink?
  • 7. Earth's Oldest Language
  • Call and Response
  • Hanging Out in the Tatooine Cantina
  • The Song of the Wild
  • 8. How to Talk with Birds
  • What the Animals Say
  • Awakening the Seventh Sense
  • Back to the Garden
  • 9. Playing Well with the Others
  • The Labrador Retriever of Primates
  • How Elephants Taught Sven Everything He Needed to Know about Business
  • Part 3. How We Co-Become: Wohderdogs and Werecats, Therapy Lizards and Robot Pets
  • 10. More Than Human
  • The Wild, the Domestic, and the Distorted
  • 11. The Animal Lover
  • Who's Raising Whom?
  • The Dog Who Taught Ethics
  • Homo homini lupus
  • 12. Reptiles and Ambivalence
  • Wild Blood Transfusion
  • Herping, USA
  • 13. The Boy Who Said Horse
  • Naomi and Koba
  • Animal-Assisted Self-Care
  • Wildlife, Therapy, and the Pet Effect
  • 14. The Replacements: Do We Really Need Animals?
  • Digital Dog and the Internet of Cows
  • Escape from Uncanny Valley
  • An Alternative Universe
  • Do They Love Us Back?
  • Part 4. The Age of Connectedness: Creating a Home for All Creatures
  • 15. New Ways to Live Together
  • Notes from the Animal Underground
  • Can't We All Live Together?
  • A New Contract for Cohabitation
  • 16. The Betweens
  • Arrival of the Neophiles
  • How Coyotes Conquered America
  • That'll Be a Caramel Macchiato for Me and an Espresso for the Bear
  • 17. Welcome to Symbiocene City
  • Designing for Peaceful Coexistence
  • Doglandia
  • Texting Pachyderms and the Bats of Bendigo
  • The Raccoons Next Door
  • 18. The New Noahs
  • Zealandia
  • Mammoth Thoughts
  • Lost World Found
  • Part 5. Wild Souls: Love, Humility, and the Principle of Reciprocity
  • 19. Dreaming Animals
  • Avatars, Symbols, and Messengers
  • The Man with the Crow Tattoo
  • The Spirit of the Brahminy Kite
  • In Fire and Smoke
  • 20. The Peaceable Kingdom
  • The Right to Be
  • 21. Learning and Teaching in a School of Animals
  • Animal Class
  • Ten Ways to Love the World
  • An Older Way of Learning
  • 22. The Bear
  • Beyond the Horizon
  • Our Calling
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Suggested Reading
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

As Louv (The Nature Principle, 2011) points out in this fascinating book, the distractions of modern times make it difficult to fully experience life. We live in a state of loneliness, consumed by our digital distractions, unless we connect to the other animals that share our world. As in his landmark book, The Last Child in the Woods (2008), and all that followed, Louv writes of our need for immersion in nature and of how our interactions with animals can help us to save not only ourselves, but also the planet. In lyrical, sometimes mystical prose, he challenges our assumptions about how we relate to other species. A young girl asks ""what is that guy saying?"" when she hears a bird's alarm calls as a predator approaches the nest, sounds her mother had not distinguished from the background suburban noise. The movement of coyotes, raccoons, bears, and foxes back into human-dominated areas shows the adaptiveness of earthlings both human and otherwise. Louv interviewed scientists, theologians, and indigenous healers as he explored the many levels of communication between animals and humans. The importance of time spent with other species and the mutual acknowledgement and curiosity found in a shared interspecies gaze ultimately leads to an affirming sense of recognition between two beings.--Nancy Bent Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this intriguing and poetic treatise, journalist Louv (Vitamin N) argues for a "great reset" in how humans relate to the rest of the animal kingdom. Humans may feel themselves separate from other creatures, he observes, but human history and existence have always been intertwined with them, to the extent that wild animals are now adapting to urban environments. He shares stories about unexpected cross-species interactions--there's a wonderful anecdote about an initially tense encounter between a diver and an octopus, who forge a "nonaggression pact"--and details about the varied ways animals (and even plants) have of communicating with each other--horses, he notes, have 17 facial expressions. After that, Louv turns to subjects that include therapeutic relations between humans and animals, the inability of technology to substitute for these interactions, and how to educate the next generation about having a healthier relationship to nature. Thoughtful and hopeful, Louv's work is a stirring look at "the blurred lines that have always existed between wild and domestic, human and other than human." Agent: Jim Levine, Levine, Greenberg, Rostan Literary. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Louv (Last Child in the Woods) advocates for critical anthropomorphism in his latest book. Scientists have typically been wary of attributing human characteristics to animals, but Louv argues that critical anthropomorphism can couple scientific knowledge with curiosity and imagination. This coupling can lead to a richer insight into nonhuman animal behavior and is providing a rich area of research for scientists known as human-animal interactions or anthrozoology. As humans are encountering extreme feelings of loneliness and disconnectedness, reconnecting to animals can counteract the negative repercussions of digital distraction, poor urban design, and economic insecurity, according to Louv. The author discusses animals of all types, from wildlife and urban wildlife to companion animals, and even robotic companion animals as potential anecdotes to feelings of hopelessness. VERDICT Looking at scientific research from a variety of experts, this is a compelling call to reestablish ties with the animal world. Strongly recommended for anyone feeling overwhelmed or spiritually bereft in today's society.--Diana Hartle, Univ. of Georgia Science Lib., Athens

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The renowned nature writer explores how we can find better ways to coexist with animals in the future.In his latest, Louv (Vitamin N: The Essential Guide to a Nature-Rich Life, 2016, etc.) expands on key themes he has addressed in his previous books: specifically, how we must engage more directly and harmoniously with nature. He offers an impassioned and compelling case for establishing a sustainable bond with animals by proactively seeking to protect them. With extensive urbanization and the devastating effects of climate change driving more wild animals outside of their traditional habitats and into the cities, the urgency is greater than ever. "Wild animals, for their solitude or independence, stay a respectable distance from us," writes Louv. "How do we do the same for them? How do we protect the spaces in which other animals live and still watch them, connect with them, be with them? The point is not just to fulfill our human need for connectedness but to mindfully replace our destructive interactionsas individuals, as a society." Weaving his personal experiences into accounts of his interviews with wildlife experts, psychologists, teachers, and others, the author recounts spiritual and sometimes mind-altering or life-changing encounters with various types of wild animals. These range from dogs to cattle to birds to snakes to sea creatures (a particularly interesting section involves a diver's enigmatic meeting with a giant octopus). Louv offers glimpses of how animals can effectively communicate with their own species and remarkable examples of cross-species interactions. He further considers how interactions with animals can be therapeutic, both physically and mentally, including our increasing dependency on support animals and evidence of how animal-assisted therapy can benefit autistic children. By understanding how to effectively connect with the animal world, argues the author, we will not only reduce human and animal loneliness; ideally, we could find the key to our survival on this planet.A thoughtfully researched, poetically inspiring call to action that will resonate with a broad range of readers. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.