Tourist Trail wins IndieReader Award for Popular Fiction
I’m pleased to announce that The Tourist Trail won the Popular Fiction category of the 2012 IndieReaders Awards. Here’s a brief Q&A I conducted about the book.
View ArticleInvisible battles
In the US, we see our share of environmental battles. But more often than not these battles are waged in courtrooms and in the media. In poorer countries, these battles are waged on the land itself,...
View ArticleSouth Korea blames whales for depleting fish stocks (so naturally it plans to...
Just when I begin to think that wiser heads will prevail around the world and whale hunting will become a thing of the past, another country decides to revive its whaling industry. This time the...
View ArticleBycatch
In The Tourist Trail, the word bycatch gets tossed around a bit. Fisherman use the word to refer to the marine creatures unintentially caught in nets and on longlines. Creatures like sharks, whales,...
View ArticleThe more we study whales, the more unique they get
This is about as close to a humpback whale as I’ve come. In the waters off the Antarctic Peninsula. These are good waters for a whale, rich in food and largely devoid of ships. Whales, for reasons we...
View ArticleWhat’s killing birds is in plain sight
I came across this article in the NY Times and can’t get it out of my head. Photographer Chris Jordan has devoted himself to taking pictures of birds living and dead on Midway Atoll in a remote part...
View ArticleSharks need protection. From humans.
If you’ve seen the movie Sharkwater then you know that sharks around the world are suffering. Despite the media’s obsession over those rare shark attacks against humans, the reality is that humans are...
View ArticleThe foxes of San Juan Island
We have foxes here in Ashland but they’re very skittish and I’ve only seen them at night (and fleetingly). But on San Juan Island in a protected area known as American Camp, foxes are quite accustomed...
View ArticleClimate change, not tourism, is hurting chinstrap penguins
Tourism and its impact on endangered species is, not surprisingly, one of the themes of The Tourist Trail. It’s not a simple issue. In the case of the Magellanic penguin colony at Punta Tombo, more...
View ArticleThe Half-Skinned Steer
At Ashland Creek Press, we’re in the early stages of putting together an anthology of short stories that focus on “how the lives of animals and humans intersect, particularly in regards to the...
View ArticleI propose a new book category: Eco-fiction
As I’ve written about previously, categorizing The Tourist Trail has been no simple task. Although there are surprises, suspense, and plenty of action, I would not categorize the book as a “thriller”...
View ArticleThe Whale Whisperer
Down in southern Argentina on the coast of Peninsula Valdez there is a phenomenon that has to be seen to be believed. The orcas have developed a unique way of going after sea lions and elephant seals....
View ArticleThe United States vs. The Sea Shepherd Society
I can’t say I’m surprised this day would come. When I began writing The Tourist Trail in 2008 I envisioned the FBI going after the leader of a fictional anti-whaling group. At the time, the US was...
View ArticleNamibian Nights: 16,000 photos over two years
Amazing. Namibian Nights from Squiver on Vimeo.
View ArticleBlackfish: A documentary about Orcas in captivity
I’m looking forward to this documentary on Orcas later this year. I hope it gets attention and wakes up the world to the horrible treatment that these creatures undergo at places like SeaWorld. Imagine...
View ArticleThe fourth time’s the charm
From a Paris Review interview with William Faulkner: INTERVIEWER Some people say they can’t understand your writing, even after they read it two or three times. What approach would you suggest for...
View ArticleThe Whaling Industry Propped up by Japan (The US isn’t exactly innocent either)
From The New York Times: Most Japanese consumers have turned away from whale meat. The industry shipped just 5,000 tons in 2011, compared with 233,000 tons at the peak in 1962, according to data from...
View ArticleThe future of African wildlife, by way of New Orleans
I no longer visit zoos. I can no longer stand to see animals pacing and suffering in such cramped cages. And if I had my way most zoos would probably not exist (certainly not as they exist now). But...
View ArticleIntroducing EcoLit Books
I wrote awhile back about the emergence of eco-literature. Since then, I’ve seen more publishers awakening to eco-literature, but I’ve long wanted there to be a website that highlighted and reviewed...
View ArticleReview of The Tourist Trail from Animal Legal Defense Fund
The Animal Legal Defense Fund has a book club and The Tourist Trail is featured this month. You can read the review here and you can sign up to win a free copy of the book. This is an amazing...
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