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What Wildness Is This:
Women Write About the Southwest
Edited by Susan Wittig Albert, Susan Hanson, Jan Epton Seale, and
Paula Stallings Yost
Introduction by Kathleen Dean Moore
Southwestern Writers Collection Series, The Wittliff Collections
Publisher: University of Texas Press, 2007
336 pp.
Price: Paperback: $19.95
"What Wildness Is This is a fitting tribute to the rugged complexity
of the Southwest from the pens of a diverse group of women writers."
—El Paso Times
How do women experience the vast, arid, rugged land of the American
Southwest? The Story Circle Network, a national organization dedicated
to helping women write about their lives, posed this question, and
nearly three hundred women responded with original pieces of writing
that told true and meaningful stories of their personal experiences
of the land. From this deep reservoir of writing—as well as
from previously published work by writers including Joy Harjo, Denise
Chávez, Diane Ackerman, Naomi Shihab Nye, Leslie Marmon Silko,
Gloria Anzaldua, Terry Tempest Williams, and Barbara Kingsolver—the
editors of this book have drawn nearly a hundred pieces that witness
both to the ever-changing, ever-mysterious life of the natural world
and to the vivid, creative, evolving lives of women interacting
with it.
Through prose, poetry, creative nonfiction, and memoir, the women
in this anthology explore both the outer landscape of the Southwest
and their own inner landscapes as women living on the land—the
congruence of where they are and who they are. The editors have
grouped the writings around eight evocative themes:
* The way we live on the land
* Our journeys through the land
* Nature in cities
* Nature at risk
* Nature that sustains us
* Our memories of the land
* Our kinship with the animal world
* What we leave on the land when we are gone
From the Gulf Coast of Texas to the Pacific Coast of California,
and from the southern borderlands to the Great Plains and the Rocky
Mountains, these intimate portraits of women's lives on the land
powerfully demonstrate that nature writing is no longer the exclusive
domain of men, that women bring unique and transformative perspectives
to this genre.
Susan Wittig Albert is the founder and past president of the Story
Circle Network. She lives near Austin, Texas. Susan Hanson teaches
in the English Department at Texas State University-San Marcos.
Jan Epton Seale is a poet and fiction writer in McAllen, Texas.
Paula Stallings Yost, founder of LifeSketches/Heirloom Memoirs,
is a personal historian and publisher in Yantis, Texas, near Dallas.
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