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Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren
Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren
Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren
Audiobook (abridged)2 hours

Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren

Written by Barry Lopez

Narrated by Barry Lopez

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

Another powerful contribution from National Book Award winner Barry Lopez.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 1, 2007
ISBN9781598873580
Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren
Author

Barry Lopez

Barry Lopez (1945–2020) was the author of thirteen books of essays, short stories, and nonfiction. He was a recipient of the National Book Award, the Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and numerous other literary and cultural honors and awards. His highly acclaimed books include Arctic Dreams, Winter Count, and Of Wolves and Men, for which he received the John Burroughs and Christopher medals. He lived in western Oregon.

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Reviews for Field Notes

Rating: 4.173077076923077 out of 5 stars
4/5

26 ratings3 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Although a big fan of his nonfiction, this is the first fictional work I have read by Barry Lopez--it definitely won't be the last. A beautiful collection.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The first 50 or so pages are fantastic and the rest isn't bad, either.

    plus 1 star for the note on type
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Such unexpected content, I found the "Field Notes" would have benefitted from a real introduction-- not a segment of the volume with the label "introduction". I approached Field Notes as something to be consulted, checked, a legal document; I started reading it that way and was distracted by my expectations of fact, only to find out that its a series of short stories. Fiction. All my other reads of Lopez were not fiction--biography with lots of latitude, but not hallucinations. I shall read it all again, with more charity toward his imagination. One of the stories has stood the test of 20 intervening years. Fifty pages in, there is an imagined conversation between the male head of the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and a significant woman, head of an environmental defense organization, who takes him to task for not having the courage to stand up to those whose way of making money is to extract resources from the earth without paying for it. She wants action; he finds excuses, calls himself practical, while she's characterized as a prostitute for living on someone else's income. He leans on the polls too much, and she disputes the polling information. With changes in characters' names, it could be 2016.