A poignant meditation on humanity's relationship with deer . . . [Howsare's] lyrical musings cast her subject in a new light . . . Readers will be enthralled. * Publishers Weekly (starred review) *
A fascinating exploration of deer . . . Outstanding natural history writing. * Kirkus Reviews (starred review) *
Extraordinary and absorbing, The Age of Deer proves John Muir's notion that when we pick out one thing in the universe we find it hitched to everything else. Howsare understands that we live in an age of numbness when 'few of us are willing to really feel,' and suggests, through the lives of deer and her experience with them, an elemental antidote. * David Gessner, author of Return of the Osprey and All the Wild That Remains *
By paying close attention to an animal often seen but rarely observed, Howsare reveals that deer are far more mysterious and complicated-and far more deeply embedded in our lives and collective histories-than they may seem. The Age of Deer is a wonderfully perceptive, absorbing, and rewarding exploration of life in all its interconnected forms. * Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction *
Erika Howsare has written a fascinating and brilliantly researched book on deer. She has an ear for the conundrums and contradictions of our entanglements with these creatures, who increasingly occupy a middle ground between wild and domestic, survivors of our species' worst predations. * Alison Hawthorne Deming, author of A Woven World *
A warm, engaging, and thoughtful look at what matters to deer and what they mean to us. Howsare is fascinated by the paradoxical status of an animal we all think we know: Not tame, but not quite wild either; fetishized by some, resented by others; all too common, and yet impossible to ignore. I highly recommend it! * Nate Blakslee, author of American Wolf *
In her lyrical and revelatory The Age of Deer, Erika Howsare crafts the definitive account of humanity's longstanding dependence on the lovely creatures, their prominent place in myth and legend, and our modern failures to live peaceably alongside them. A cautionary (but often beautiful) tale of good intentions gone awry. * Earl Swift, author of Across the Airless Wilds: The Lunar Rover and the Triumph of the Final Moon Landings *
The Age of Deer joins a growing canon of fresh treatments of wild creatures that are anciently enmeshed in the human story. And as Howsare reminds us in her warm, relaxed style, we will always have such a relationship with deer. The next one you see is going to intrigue you in a whole new way. * Dan Flores, New York Times bestselling author of Coyote America and Wild New World *
I carried The Age of Deer in my pack for a few days through a canyon in Colorado, and it was a great complement to the lopsided slopes of fallen trees and the sound of roaring water. The deer is due its storyteller and Howsare takes the role with smartness and grace. * Craig Childs, author of Tracing Time, House of Rain, and The Secret Knowledge of Water *
An unflinching look at a wild and mysterious creature that has run through our physical lives and imaginations since the Palaeolithic era and now faces us with the complexity and brutality of the Anthropocene. Erika Howsare's The Age of Deer is a compelling inquiry into the violence and beauty of a relationship that asks as many questions as it provides insights: about control, about desire, about what it means to be alive, and whether it is possible to re-forge an ancestral kinship with the more-than-human world in a time of ecological collapse. * Charlotte Du Cann, co-director of The Dark Mountain Project *
This is a diligently researched and engaging mixture of mythology, history, and modern culture, blended seamlessly by personal observation and deft reporting. The end result is some highly accomplished natural history writing. It is erudite, absorbing and very readable with regular and stunning flashes of insight and lyricism * Charles Smith-Jones, author of A Guide to the Deer of the World *
A timely and passionate book that places deer, philosophically as well as actually, much nearer humanity than we might have once thought. And a brave ending around what it means for a non-hunter to hunt. * Roger Morgan-Grenville *
A brilliant exploration of the complex ties between humans and deer. I have hoped for an equally insightful book about our fraught relationship with this familiar neighbor. The Age of Deer is that book - and it is a masterpiece * Washington Post *
The book is not a collection of deer facts so much as a many-stranded conversation ... a splendid document of intellectual and emotional growth * LA Times *
It is an absolute delight. There's not a page on which the reader will not learn something * Boston Globe *
Howsare is a fine writer * John Lewis-Stempel *
The Age of Deer is a fascinating history of our relationship with, and dependency on, deer. Erika Howsare explains her revelatory and encyclopaedic research of a complex subject with great warmth and in a lyrical and eminently readable style. I thoroughly recommend it to anyone with a love of natural history and an interest in wildlife conservation. * Johnny Scott, author of A Book of Britain: The Lore, Landscape and Heritage of a Treasured Countryside *