Description
A remarkable and moving cross-genre work about animal rights by one of America’s foremost experimental writers
Reviews
"Field’s frequently shifting scenes evoke Alice Notley, Anne Carson, and James Joyce." — Publishers Weekly
"Thalia Field’s curiosity and probe are infectious, tantalizing, irrepressible. She is one of our most startling, original younger writers." — Anne Waldman
"Between the inward tension of the point and the outward push of the line, Thalia Field maps a force field of relations, power games, shifting configurations, in a language both cool and intense, and with a surveyor’s precision." — Rosmarie Waldrop
"A hybrid of essayistic fragments and poetic lines exploring the toxic relationship between humans and the animal world by way of myth, metaphor and science: 'the forests have changed, the temperatures, / whole species gone north or south.'" — New York Times
"Field draws from a variety of sources — scientific, historical, philosophical — to create a kind of text collage that nonetheless moves from point to point. Her sense of humor is witty and snarky....Field lands many a critical body blow to speciesism." — Carl Little, Hyperallergic
"Thalia Field does not settle on final answers but draws us into inquiries that unsettle our definitions. She is ignited by nature and the wild; she does not recoil from repelling us with factual talk; her book intends to move us to thoughtful action by destabilizing us with art." — Anakana Schofield, Bookpost