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“A wild book in every sense of the word, full of stories that will leave you trembling, but even fuller of ideas that will send you out into the world with new eyes.” —Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth
“This book is like a prehistoric cave. If you have the nerve to enter it and you get used to the dark, you’ll discover things about storytelling which are startling, urgent and deeply true. Things each of us once knew, but forgot when we were born into the 19th and 20th centuries. Extraordinary rediscoveries!” —John Berger, author of Ways of Seeing and Why Look at Animals
“I cannot imagine another book that so gently and so persuasively alters how we look at ourselves.” —Richard Louv, author of The Nature Principle
“One of the most compelling and important ecology books in decades.” —Rex Weyler, co-founder of Greenpeace International
“A truly alchemical book. . . . Those of us who still hope for a revolutionary change in our thinking toward animals, the living land and the climate will welcome this book. Abram is an audacious thinker, a true visionary, and, really, just a damn good nature writer.” —San Francisco Book Review
“An intricately textured, deep breath of a book that blurs the boundaries between human and animal, mind and earth. Prose as lush as a moss-draped rain forest and as luminous as a high desert night. . . Deeply resonant with indigenous ways of knowing, Abram lets us listen in on wordless conversations with ancient boulders, walruses,
birds, and roof beams. His profound recognition of intelligences other than our own enables us to enter into reciprocal symbioses that can, in turn, sustain the world. Becoming Animal illuminates a way forward in restoring relationship with the earth, led by our vibrant animal bodies to re-inhabit the glittering world." —Orion
“A stunning, compelling journey into embodied, earthly intelligence, Becoming Animal is philosophy at its engaging best. Prepare for a wild, profound ride into the essence of the human animal—an essence embedded in communion with the Earth. A must read for anyone concerned about the future of the planet and ourselves.” —Kierán Suckling, co-founder and Executive Director, Center for Biological Diversity
“In Becoming Animal, David Abram has crafted the rarest of literary gems: a sublime effort combining transcendent prose, lucid insight, and lasting consequence.” —Shambhala Sun
“If we are to survive—indeed, if we are to stop the dominant culture from killing the planet—it will be in great measure because of brave and brilliant beings like David Abram. This is a beautifully written, deeply moving, and important book.” —Derrick Jensen, author of A Language Older Than Words and Endgame
Becoming Animal brings us home to ourselves as living organs of this wild planet. Its teachings leap off the page and translate immediately into lived experience. —Joanna Macy, Buddhist scholar and activist
“Without doubt one of America’s greatest nature writers, one who ably follows in the footsteps of Muir, Thoreau and Leopold. . . .[A] book of such transformative potential that it needs to be read twice in quick succession to get the full benefit. . . . The language is luminous, the style hypnotic. Abram weaves a spell that brings the world alive.”
—Resurgence
“Pure enthusiasm drives Abram to explore the yearning of our body for the larger body of Earth. . . . [Abram] brings the magician’s sense of mystery and playful surprise. . . His celebratory embrace of all that surrounds him is refreshing in the extreme.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“As with many deeply original—and radical—books, this work may startle, even provoke the reader in its electric reversal of conventional thought. . . . [T]his is a portrait of the artist as a young raven, arguing, with all the subtlety of his mind, for the mindedness of the body. An exercise of uncanny imagination.” —Jay Griffiths, author of Wild
“This brave and magical book summons wild wonder to remind us who we are.”
—Amory B. Lovins, Chief Scientist, Rocky Mountain Institute
“Speculative, learned, and always ‘lucid and precise’ as the eye of the vulture that confronted him once on a cliff ledge, Abram has one of those rare minds which, like the mind of a musician or a great mathematician, fuses dreaminess with smarts.” —The Village Voice
“Refreshing. [Abram] allows himself to be expansive, sentimental, and more than a little mad. . . . His book is transformative, animated by piercing observations and hallucinatory intensity.” —Bookforum
“This startling, sparkling book challenges the technological temper of our times by returning us to the animal body in ourselves. Abram shows brilliantly how this body brings us back to Earth in a series of acutely moving descriptions of its polysensory genius. An original work of primary philosophy, it is written with verve, passion, and poetry.” —Edward S. Casey, author of The Fate of Place: A Philosophical History
A PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award Runner-up
David Abram’s first book, The Spell of the Sensuous, hailed as “revolutionary” by the Los Angeles Times, as “daring” and “truly original” by Science, has become a classic of environmental literature. Now he returns with a startling exploration of our human entanglement with the rest of nature.
As the climate veers toward catastrophe, the innumerable losses cascading through the biosphere make vividly evident the need for a metamorphosis in our relation to the living land. For too long we’ve ignored the wild intelligence of our bodies, taking our primary truths from technologies that hold the living world at a distance. Abram’s writing subverts this distance, drawing readers ever closer to their animal senses in order to explore, from within, the elemental kinship between the human body and the breathing Earth. The shape-shifting of ravens, the erotic nature of gravity, the eloquence of thunder, the pleasures of being edible: all have their place in this book.
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Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Spirited Book!,
By
This review is from: Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology (Hardcover)
David Abram's Becoming Animal was for me a thought- and experience-provoking extension of his popular 1996 Spell of the Sensuous. That eco-phenomenological sensibility found in Abram's first book ' the sense that mind arises from our sensory relations with ecological realities ' is here deepened through a series of reflections on personal experiences coupled with philosophical analysis and questioning. In many ways, this book further situates Abram within a rich environmental tradition that considers the nature of 'ecological thinking', a contemporary tradition that began in the 1960s and 70s with the likes of Paul Shepard who in 1967 coined the term 'ecological thinking', Gregory Bateson who wrote the popular An Ecology of Mind and John Livingston who concluded conservation is at root 'a state of mind.' In the spirit of these seminal thinkers, Abram asks 'What if mind, rightly understood, is not a special property of humankind, but is rather a property of the Earth itself ' a power in which we are carnally immersed?' (p.123) But for those of us willing to follow Abram, Becoming Animal takes us into terrain that goes far beyond the earlier philosophical discourses as we enter into a sensuous ecological reality that seemingly can communicate and inform our thought if we are attentive.Amidst the book's many insightful anecdotes, Abram tells the story of a man whose ears are attuned to the different dialects of trees, those dialects being heard as the wind blows through the unique configuration of branches and leaves that make up different tree species. While sceptics of such intimate sensibility point out to him that 'the sound is created not by the tree but only be the wind blowing through the tree,' he writes that these 'clever persons seem not to notice that it is demonstrably the same when they speak' (p. 171). It is examples like this that help guide the reader beyond theoretical ideas of 'ecological thinking' and toward the kind of intimate relations that are required to experience the sensuous grounding of such thought. The truly radical nature of this thesis is clarified in much more detail as the reader approaches the end of the book and the title Becoming Animal is seen to be more than just metaphoric flourish. Reflecting back on personal experiences in Nepal with a shaman, Abram describes an initiation into sensory knowledge that reveals the true historic roots of 'ecological thinking' goes far deeper than the late 1960s environmental movement ' as Paul Shepard also knew well. Without giving too much away, here is one last intriguing quote that arises as Abram explains a sustained meditation he was directed to have on the being of a raven: 'To move as another is simply the most visceral approach to feel one's way into the body of that creature, and so to taste the flavor of its experience, entering into the felt intelligence of the other' (p.238). The sensory and spirited implications of Becoming Animal will likely not sit well with those who still commonly think rational thought can control and manage the planet. But for those of us who see environmental issues like climate change as highlighting the limitations to rational thought, Abram's book offers us some vital insights into the kind of experiential revolution that may be required to create a sustainable future.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Ecological Flaneur,
By rhinoceros "rhino" (peterborough, canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology (Hardcover)
Abram's previous book, The Spell of the Sensuous, brought the phenomenology of Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger and others alongside of indigenous perspectives for being in the world. Fifteen years later, it's still a remarkable paradigm-buster of a book whose insights continue to percolate through the ecological humanities.Becoming Animal showcases Abram as storyteller and flaneur. Here he writes with even more distance between himself and the academic world that he voluntarily renounced some time ago. Call it David-Abram-in-the-world, and the encounters shared here - from his kayak, on the trail or deep in the Himilayas - are riveting. He gives us a briny, kayak-level view of a sea lion colony, in that moment when its members pour into the sea after the author; the ubiquitous, and just as overlooked, shadow-world of trees that colour our thoughts and feelings, often below our conscious awareness; even a fresh look on the familiar interior vistas of our homes. But it's his accounts of his unlikely apprenticeships with indigenous knowledge keepers - the ones who showed him how to live up to the book's title - that had me turning the pages the fastest. The book's pentultimate chapters - "Sleight of Hand" and "Shapeshifting" - deserve to be counted as contemporary classics of ecological literature.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.8 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews) 75 of 78 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Becoming Animal by recovering our essential humanness,
By Glenn Aparicio Parry - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology (Hardcover)
If you have read Abram's impressive first book, The Spell of the Sensuous, you have probably been, like me, breathlessly awaiting his second. While the first book was a hard act to follow - being both a scholarly and passionate plea for humanity to recover its sense of humanness by recovering its immediate connection to what is other than human - his second equally wonderful book, Becoming Animal, is different. Abram makes no bones about not attempting the same comprehensive and scholarly review. Instead, he gives us a far more personal account of his journey into discovery of his animal and ultimately human self.The result is another sublime work. Abram takes us through a variety of experiences in his daily life, some exotic, some mundane, but always immediate and present. It is a courageous work, taking us inside his life in a very intimate and direct way. Whether he is chronicling his baby daughter's spontaneous connection to a stone, his own adventures shapeshifting with ravens and shamans atop the Himalayas, his lament in leaving a rental home, or his clumsy attempts to fix a vacuum cleaner - Abram always maintains the same attention to presence. The book as a whole is an original guide to a way of thinking, seeing and interacting with the sensuous, breathing world. Becoming Animal is a bit like entering a hypnotic trance, which is clearly Abram's intention. Every sentence embodies the message - keeping a rhythm, a pulse - just like the moving, breathing earth he speaks of. The sentences are a microcosm of the book, bringing together seamlessly what at first appear as diverse, unrelated experience. In the end, in a wholly personal way, he reprises some of the themes of his first book: that we need to reawaken our senses to the speaking, sensuous earth, that the written word and abstract thinking that pervades our society must be rebalanced by a restoration - a "restorying" of the land herself; that "rejuvenation of oral culture is an ecological imperative." He doesn't seek to eliminate abstract thinking or technology; he simply asks us to remember where it was abstracted from, so that we can remember our true origins and recover our essential humanness. In short, it is another masterpiece from one of our most gifted contemporary storytellers. 29 of 29 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Medicine,
By Amy Hannon - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology (Hardcover)
Thomas Berry diagnosed the ailment of our culture as autism. In a similar vein, Richard Louv called it nature-deficit disorder. Either way David Abram's new book, Becoming Animal, is good medicine for our entrancement with the written word and the electronic screens which flatten our world to two dimensions. In the philosophical tradition of the phenomenologists describing our different forms of alienation, this book lures us back to our authentic heritage as evolutionary cousins to both the stars and all the animals. It draws on insights unveiled in Abram's earlier masterpiece, The Spell of the Sensuous, but unfolds them like a Chinese puzzle to reveal ceaseless horizons of meaning hiding in our most common experience from seeing our shadows, hearing birdsong or sensing the dyanamism of a rock face in our path.I especially love the reverend way Abram enfolds key ideas from the western Religions of the Book into our primal experience, explaining the metaphysics of angels and even of God, without any diminution of either concept but only expanded joy and access. This is a marvelous, and yes, a magical book. Along with The Spell of the Sensuous, it will stand as a new classic in American philosophy and nature writing. 41 of 43 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book actually deserves all five stars,
By snowy owl books - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology (Hardcover)
For once I have found the enigma of a book that deserves all 5 stars from Amazon for it's gutsy interpretation of an old subject we rarely want to discuss. The human animal and his or her relation to the wild, how it creates thought and intelligence and even rationale. Let's examine how being more like an animal might do us some good....and less like a rational coldly removed abstract being bent on knowing truth by studying even more of the abstract. We have forgotten that experience in nature qualifies the true source of human development. Our surest form of truth is within the mystery of nature, everyday nature as perceived through our senses is what can bring us the most equitable and perhaps the most satisfyingly human encounter of the cosmos- not the science of quarks, genetics, microcosms, stellar phenomenon and such... though they may thrill with glitzy peeks of an unknown invisible universe at extravagant cost. This book is just incredibly different than others, as is the author and his divergent knowledge and experience of culture, city and mountains, he apprentices the world with a desire to understand how humans identify with the Earth- Remarkably honest, this man strides through sentences in a sort of bare nakedness of truth we have been longing to hear but somehow have not been able to say a word about in the last few centuries or so. It is complete ecstatic freedom and joy to read this authors uplifting work on the nature of being human - not the ever dualistic based "Human nature" that still pervades science and modern thought. How can you not enjoy a visionary work from a man whose very keen senses leads us all over the globes, face to face with mountains, magicians, shamanic creatures, old cities, and take us into the deepest observational realms of leaving our skin to soar like a bird. Magnificently done, now keep writing!!!
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