The Atlantic

Our Dramatic Relationship With the Natural World

A 2023 novel that revolved around a character getting lost in the wilderness
Source: Heritage Art / Heritage Images / Getty
This is an edition of the Books Briefing, our editors’ weekly guide to the best in books. Sign up for it here.

Nature writing has always been a little unsatisfying to me, I’ll admit. Unlike our relationships with other humans, which are tinged with friction and love and all the other ingredients of drama, our encounters with the natural world seemed fairly static. Nature exists out there: We walk through it, we enjoy its beauty, we sometimes feel its indiscriminate wrath. But there is not much back-and-forth. Or so I assumed. This week, Kelly McMasters gave me a lot to think about, and to read, with a about our connections to nature, a, which is about her experience swimming across nine American waterways, including the Hudson and the Mississippi, each time feeling personally transformed and acquiring a new, visceral understanding of the landscape. Or Terry Tempest Williams’s , about the Great Salt Lake region where she grew up, a geography, McMasters writes, of “fear and comfort,” in which a troubling rise in the lake’s water level was affecting the local humans and birds. In each of these books, people find themselves having a fraught—and dramatic—confrontation with the animals, trees, and land around them. Reading about these titles, I suddenly realized that one of my own favorite books of 2023 did exactly this same thing.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic4 min read
Dropping Out Is Biden’s Most Patriotic Option
Joe Biden says he ran for president in 2020 because of Charlottesville. He says he ran because he saw the threat Donald Trump posed to the country and the threat he posed to democracy. If Biden truly believes that, he needs to end his reelection camp
The Atlantic2 min read
The Secrets of Those Who Succeed Late in Life
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning. “Today we live in a society structured to promote
The Atlantic4 min read
Amazon Decides Speed Isn’t Everything
Amazon has spent the past two decades putting one thing above all else: speed. How did the e-commerce giant steal business away from bookstores, hardware stores, clothing boutiques, and so many other kinds of retailers? By selling cheap stuff, but mo

Related