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10 books for the nature lover this holiday season

If you know someone who loves the great outdoors, they might love these books!

If you know someone who loves the great outdoors, they might love these books! Here are 10books for the nature enthusiast on your holidaylist.

The Wild Heavensby Sarah Louise Butler

The Wild Heavens is a novel by Sarah Louise Butler. (Douglas & McIntyre, Bobbi Barbarich)

The Wild Heavensis a novel about the magic and mystery of nature and our relationship to it. Over the course of one cold winter day, a young motherSandy Langley reflects on her grandfather, who was obsessed with a mysterious creature in the woods, their relationship, motherhood and more, while finally coming to terms with the mysteries and tragedies that shaped her life and made her who she is.

Sarah Louise Butler is a writer from British Columbia.The Wild Heavensis her first novel.

Sarah Louise Butler talks about how science, nature and family became major themes in her novel The Wild Heavens.

Magdalenaby Wade Davis

Magdalena is a book by Wade Davis. (Adam Dillon, Knopf Canada)

Wade Davis highlights theMagdalena River in Colombia in his latest book,Magdalena.He tells the story of the river and, along the way, the story of Colombia and the people who rely on the river for their livelihood through a combination of personal travel memoir, journalism and biography.

Davis is a writer,photographer and filmmaker whose work has taken him to the Amazon, Tibet, Polynesia, the Arctic and beyond.He is a professor of anthropology at the University of British Columbia anda former National Geographic explorer-in-residence.He has written several books, includingInto the SilenceandOne River.He was the CBC Massey Lecturer in 2009, giving a talk calledTheWayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World.

My TNOT: Jill Heinerth

4 years ago
Duration 4:33
Extreme diver and explorer Jill Heinerth recalls her time exploring underneath the Arctic sea ice, and wonders if the photos she took will someday be used as images of 'extinct species.' She also reflects on the time she became the first woman to swim with a wild polar bear.

Into the Planet by Jill Heinreith

Into the Planet is a memoir by Jill Heinerth. (Doubleday Canada)

Jill Heinerthis one of Canada's most renowned cave divers and is one of the few female cave divers working today. She was the first person in history to dive into an Antarctic iceberg and led the team that discovered ancient remains of Mayan civilizations. She was also a go-to expert during the rescue of the young Thai soccer team in 2018.Into the Planetis her story, but it's also an introduction to the drama and adventure of cave diving.

Heinerth is a cave diver.Into the Planetis her first book.

The Cree poet Randy Lundy on Field Notes for the Self, and drawing inspiration from what's right in his own backyard.

TreeTalkby Ariel Gordon

TreeTalkis a book by Ariel Gordon. (Mike Deal, At Bay Press)

In the summer of 2017, Ariel Gordon spent two days on a patio in downtown Winnipeg, writing poetry she hung on a tree. She invited people who passed by to participate in her project. When the two days were over, 234 poems hung from the tree.TreeTalkbrings these poems together into a single long poem that questions our relationship to nature and explores what it means to live in a city and in nature at the same time.

Gordon is a poet from Winnipeg. She is also the author of the nonfiction bookTreedand was a co-editor on the anthologyGush.

Cry Wolfby Harold R. Johnson

Cry Wolf is a book by Harold R. Johnson. (University of Regina Press)

In 2005, 22-year-old University of Waterloo student Kenton Carnegie was killed in a wolf attack near his work camp in northern Saskatchewan. Harold R. Johnson, an experienced hunter and trapper, hadbeen told to stay away from wolves. Johnson takes on wolves and the mythology around them inCry Wolf.He explores Carnegie's death and other wolf attacks and suggests that we should take wolves more seriously.

Johnson is a formerCrown prosecutor who has written several works of both fiction and nonfiction. His bookFirewater: How Alcohol Is Killing My People (and Yours)was a finalist for the Governor General's Literary Award for nonfiction. His other books include the novelCorvus, the genre-bending memoirCliffordand the nonfiction workPeace and Good Order.

Two Trees Make a Forest by Jessica J. Lee

A book cover featuring mountains and forest next to a woman with long brown hair looking off camera.
Two Trees Make a Forest is a book by Jessica J. Lee. (Hamish Hamilton, Ricardo A. Rivas)

Two Trees Make a Forestis an exploration of how geographical forces are interlaced with our family stories. A chance discovery of letters written by her immigrant grandfather leads Jessica J. Lee to her ancestral homeland, Taiwan. There, she traces his story while growing closer to the land he knew. Throughout her adventures, Lee uncovers surprising parallels between nature and human stories that shaped her family and their beloved island. In the memoir, she also turns a critical eye onto colonialist explorers who mapped the land and named plants, and both relied on and often erased the labour and knowledge of local communities.

Two Trees Make a Forestwon the 2020Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction.

Lee is a British Canadian Taiwanese author, environmental historian, and winner of the RBC Taylor Prize Emerging Author Award. Her first book,Turning, was longlisted for the Frank Hegyi Award for Emerging Authors.

A naturalist channels a mother polar bear to tell the story of environmental change

Field Notes for the Self by Randy Lundy

Randy Lundy is a Canadian poet and writer. (University of Regina Press, Submitted)

Field Notes for the Selfis a series that takes inspiration from the poetic structuring of Patrick Lane, John Thompsonand Charles Wright, but their closest cousins may be Arvo Prt's.This collection deals with the idea of liberation from personal and inherited trauma and memories of violence inflictedon Lundy'sIndigenous ancestors which continue to haunt him. Similar to Randy Lundy'spast works, this collection is rooted in observations of the natural world.

Lundy is a Saskatchewan-based short story writer and award-winning poet. He has published three previous books,Under the Night Sun,Gift of the HawkandBlackbird Song, which won theSaskatchewan Arts Board Poetry Award in 2019.

Ice Walkerby James Raffan

Ice Walker is a book by James Raffan. (Simon & Schuster, Jason van Bruggen)

InIce Walker, explorer and adventurer James Raffan asks readers to look at the Arctic through unexpected eyes: the eyes of a polar bear named Nanu and her family. As climate change changes the Arctic, where Nanu's family has lived and hunted for generations, the bear must figure out how to find food and shelter for her family, on a landscape that is warming up, where precious ice is melting rapidly and everything is changing.

Raffan is a writer, teacher, geographer and adventurer. He has written more than 20 books, includingCircling the Midnight Sun,Emperor of the NorthandSummer North of Sixty.His work has appeared in several Canadian media outlets, including the Globe and Mail, Canadian Geographic and CBC. In 2020, Canadian Geographicnamed him one of the "90 most influential explorers in the nation's recorded history."

Imperilled Oceanby Laura Trethewey

Imperilled Ocean is a book by Laura Trethewey. (Goose Lane Editions, Stuart Isett)

Imperilled Oceanby Laura Tretheweyfollows several different people and their remarkable stories, but they all have one thing in common: the ocean.Imperilled Oceancombines remarkable stories such as a community living on the water battling eviction to a Ghanian teenager trying to make it to Europe on a life raft with deep research to paint a portrait of a place that takes up most of the space on this planet, yet we know so little about, in a time when climate change is rapidly changing the ocean and humanity's relationship to it.

Trethewey is a science journalist who specializes in oceans. She is a writer and editor for Vancouver Aquarium's website Ocean.org.Imperilled Oceanis her first book.

Field Notes from an Unintentional Birderby Julia Zarankin

A composite image of a woman with black hair and glasses smiling into the camera beside a white book cover.
Field Notes from an Unintentional Birder is a book by Julia Zarankin. (Douglas & McIntyre, Submitted by Julia Zarankin)

When she was 35, Julia Zarankinwas divorced and changing careers. She decided she needed a hobby, and unexpectedly turnedto birdwatching. Her memoir,Field Notes from an Unintentional Birder,blends together ablossoming love affair with birding with her own biography she was born in the Soviet Union, grew up in Canada and spent time living in Paris.

Zarankinis a writer and lecturer based in Toronto. She made the2020 CBC Short Story Prize shortlistforBlack-legged Kittiwake.Field Notes from an Unintentional Birderis her first book.

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