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Unorthodox Guide to Wildlife

Unorthodox Guide to Wildlife

Katie Vautour’s extraordinary debut collection is an eclectic examination of the space where humans and animals meet, where migratory patterns encounter commercial flights, and birds appear as fishermen, security guards, and street performers. There are riffs on the chameleon and lyrebird, odes to buffalo and shark. With poems that are at once intuitive yet idiosyncratic, visceral yet cerebral, and that flourish an unconventional sense of effortless motion, An Unorthodox Guide to Wildlife considers how animals exist in our lives and imaginations: as autonomous beings, as mimics and metaphors of our own lives, and as bellwethers of environmental damage. At times humourous, tragic, or both, these poems tell the story of natural existence in a sometimes unnatural world.

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Claire Bennet

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average rating is 5 out of 5

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An Unorthodox Guide to Wildlife

"In the barn, there's a horse with a horn / of light filtering through hay-strewn rafters. / You should see it: unicorns are rare, almost gone." 🦄

I think Katie Vautour must've had fun writing the poems in her collection, "An Unorthodox Guide to Wildlife." How could you not, with words like skedaddle, ragamuffin, and barnacle-spackled? I certainly had fun reading them!

Her descriptive writing re-interprets the lives of animals from new perspectives, and details human movements in wild ways. This was a clever new way of looking at everything from sea urchins to penguins, and of examining how human and animal, and urban and natural worlds collide.

I recommend this book.

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