BOOKMONGER DEFENDING NATURE’S RICH SONGBOOK ‘Earth’s Wild Music’ explores terrain, wildlife Kathleen Dean Moore’s latest essay col- lection, “Earth’s Wild Music,” is a book for our times. Moore is a philosopher, environmental- ist and interdisciplinary educator who had a long affi liation with Oregon State Univer- sity. She left academia in 2013 and has since dedicated herself to amplifying humani- ty’s moral imperative to understand and heal the environmental degradation that humans have caused. It has been an uphill battle. In these writings, Moore uses the irre- sistible siren songs of the natural world to draw readers in. Early on, she notes, dino- saurs could not vocalize in the way of many animals today — they were alive before voice box organs had evolved. Although, scientists believe dinos were able to hiss or blow air through resonance chambers in their skulls. Song didn’t begin to fl ourish until the development of an organ called the syrinx in birds, which has been detected in 67-mil- lion-year-old bird fossils. Mammals devel- oped something similar — the larynx. “Now the whole Earth chimes, from deep in the sea to high in the atmosphere, with the sounds of snapping shrimp, sing- ing mice, roaring whales, moaning bears, clattering dragonfl ies, and a fi sh calling like a foghorn,” Moore writes. “Who could cat- alog the astonishing oeuvre of the Earth?” With her own philosophical bent for wonder and a poetic capacity for fi nely honed cadence, Moore takes readers with her as she roams the varied habitats of western North America. Whether on the grasslands of Saskatchewan, the islands of southeast Alaska or the dunes of Oregon’s coast, she explores the terrain and the wild- life that inhabit it. The immediacy of Moore’s writing is a joy. From her descriptions, you will think your ears are still ringing from that crack of thunder over the marsh — or that you were the one to experience the unnerving eyesh- ine of spiders. Every essay is a sortie into deep engagement with the natural world. But then there is the capper at the end of each piece. After you have had a chance to get to know the charms of the Arizona desert, for 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM This week’s book ‘Earth’s Wild Music’ by Kathleen Dean Moore Counterpoint — 272 pages — $26 instance, a little gray box con- tains this factoid: in Saguaro National Park, a place dedi- cated to the preservation of that iconic cactus, “estab- lishment of young saguaros has nearly ceased since the early 1990s,” according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. The decline is attributed to drought and extreme heat events associated with cli- mate change. There is a dreaded gray box at the end of every chapter and each contains a dire statistic: the decline of migratory shorebirds; the fragmentation of habitat for red-legged frogs; the global shrinkage of for- ests; the rise of bone mar- row cancer in humans and so on. Moore rolls all of these into 250-plus pages of keen observations about the splendor of our home planet and how human activity and apa- thy are rapidly devas- tating it. “Earth’s Wild Music” is a lamentation, an exaltation, an impas- sioned indictment and most defi nitely a call to action. The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMi- chael, who writes this weekly column focusing on the books, authors and publishers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Contact her at bar- baralmcm@gmail. com.