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Shaped
by Wind and Water:
Reflections
of a Naturalist
by Ann Haymond Zwinger
Milkweed
Editions, 2000 |
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Commissioned by Milkweed Editions for its
Credo
Series of autobiographical books by prominent nature writers, Shaped
by Wind and Water is an uncharacteristically personal reflection by
Ann Haymond Zwinger.
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"My discomfort of introspection may
be why I prefer natural history writing, which dictates an outward focus,
not an inward one," she explains in the opening pages of a seven-day examination
of the guiding principles behind her life as a naturalist.
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Born in 1925, Zwinger began her writing career
in her 40s and has authored and co-authored more than two dozen volumes,
including Beyond the Aspen Grove (1970), Wind in the Rock (1978), A Conscious
Stillness (1982) and The Nearsighted Naturalist (1998).
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During her week's introspection, spent in
retreat at Hedgebrook on Whidbey Island west of Seattle, Zwinger discovered
and shares these beliefs:
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"I believe that drawing, the carefully
observed tracking of form, is a necessity for learning... the nonverbal
articulation of what one sees."
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"Journals or logs or field notes (like
sketches) are seldom artistic masterpieces, but they are valuable and accurate
accounts, written as they are, on the spot. No natural history writer should
be without one."
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"I would like to be a link in a mental
food chain that provides reliable and intriguing information about the
natural world and its intricate workings with anyone open to its wonders."
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"I believe that it takes time to develop
the deep respect and understanding for the natural world that we humans
must have to survive."
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"If life is a search, then this is the
path I follow: red cedar, Douglas fir, winter wren, rainbow spectrum, yellowjacket.
And when there are no finite answers, there is at least hope and concinnity
along the way."
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