Salt lakes An unnatural history

Caroline Tracey

Book - 2026

"Salt lakes are some of the world's most extraordinary ecosystems, but nearly all of them-from the Great Salt Lake to the Aral Sea and beyond-are drying up. Their decline is already the second-largest contributor to sea level rise, and their future loss will create widespread dust storms, threatening the water cycle, migratory birds, and human health. In Salt Lakes, Caroline Tracey takes readers on her travels across the American West, to Mexico, Argentina, and Kazakhstan, exquisitely describing the strange world of salt lakes, documenting their loss, and tracing efforts to save them. She delves into Mormon diaries, Soviet realist novels, and Australian Aboriginal paintings to make sense of how salt lakes have reflected the fast-c...hanging natural world around us, while unraveling the lakes' lessons for her own life as she finds queer love and a sense of home in an imperfect world. Salt Lakes is a love letter to a strange and delicate ecosystem-and a moving call to fight for all that is fragile in our lives"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Company [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
Caroline Tracey (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781324089025
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Drawing sustenance from salt lakes. This book by Tracey, whose writing has appeared in theNew Yorker and theNew York Review of Books, is an education as much about anthropology as geography, about myth and cultural history as much as geological and hydrological science. It's also about her awakening as a lesbian. Enthralled by the unconventional beauty and strangeness of salt lakes around the world, from the Great Salt Lake to the Aral Sea in Kazakhstan, Tracey has been venturing to them for more than a decade, all the while forging relationships with other scientists and activists in common cause. This scrupulously researched survey of some important salt lakes, threatened or ephemeral, is also placed in human context, with an emphasis on dispossessed cultures and efforts to preserve these natural resources and the species that depend on them. Tracey writes that some birds, for instance, including American avocets, "evolved to live at saline lakes, learning to feed in ways that avoid swallowing salt and developing a specialized anatomy to deal with the minerals they do ingest." Intriguingly, Tracey relates her sexuality to what she sees in the natural world. She writes, "Queers have opened up what counts as marriage; we've expanded and exploded the rhythms and practices of life that its legal bonds comprise. Similarly, though the Owens [Lake] may not count as a 'real' lake, it's still something real, existing in the world in its strange and unique way, providing habitat to plants and flies and birds. It has opened up what counts as a lake." The author's call to protect marginal places and ways of life resonates deeply. She writes, "Queerness and biodiversity: both forms of difference that enrich the world." A perceptive writer's urgent call to prioritize the abundance and diversity of life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.