| SUNDAY,
DECEMBER 14
Tom Brown, The Tracker
Tom Brown is revered for what he is able to teach about the spirit
and for his ability to be completely at home in the natural world.
He will read from his memoir, The Tracker, about his early
education in the New Jersey Pine Barrens under the tutelage of Stalking
Wolf, a Lipan Apache elder. As a young boy, Brown learned how to
track, stalk and survive in the wilderness for days on end. He trained
himself not to feel the cold and to be so still in the long grass
that the wild bucks stepped casually over him as they would step
over a fallen log. Brown is the author of The Way of the Scout
and many field guides. He is the founder of the Tracking, Nature
and Wilderness Survival School in New Jersey. Come early for a Wildlife
Walk with an experienced tracker. Meet at Wave Hill House, 11AM.
SUNDAY,
January 11
Kathy Garlick and Peggy Ann Tartt
Although Garlick and Tartt’s
books, The Listening World and Among Bones are quite different from
each other, their poems reflect the absolute originality and
intensity that comes from immersion in the natural
world. Garlick has received a Ford Foundation Fellowship and Tartt
has been a Pushcart Press nominee; their poems have appeared in
such journals as Ploughshares, Field, African American Review and
Prairie Schooner.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 29
Jack Hitt and Nalini Nadkarni
Jack Hitt’s “A Gospel
According to the Earth” (Harper’s) is a brilliant essay about the
contemporary parables created by the new eco-faith and the deep
connections between biblical religion and envi-ronmentalism. “Treetop
Barbie” is the brainchild of Nalini Nadkarni, a highly respected
canopy ecologist. With funding from a Guggenheim, she has invented
unique ways to connect us to her scientific work, speaking at
churches and temples on “Trees and Spirituality” as part of her
outreach.
SUNDAY, MARCH 21
Sue Halpern and Bill McKibben
Halpern’s novel, The Book of Hard Things, is set in the Adirondack
Mountains. Her non-fiction books are Four Wings and a Prayer, about
Monarch butterfly migrations, and Migrations to Solitude. Bill McKibben’s
Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age is a sequel to his chilling
The End of Nature. Enough is the point at which we step back from
crossing the line in human genetic exploration, the moment where
we wake from our
sleepwalk toward the future and realize we are in danger of losing
the meaning of what it is to be human.
2003-2004 Hearthside Readings is generously supported by Poets
& Writers, Inc. with funds from the New York State Council on
the Arts—a state agency, and by the Axe-Houghton Foundation. Sustaining
support for Wave Hill is provided by the New York City Department
of Cultural Affairs.
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