Desert Writers 1: Nabhan, Meloy, Childs
A few days ago in a thread on Facebook I idly mentioned the possibility that I might just make a short list of desert writers whose work I’ve admired over the years. People responded enthusiastically to the idea, so I actually had to put that list together rather than just yammering about it.
So here’s a start. I’ll be doing three writers at a time, and will try to get one of these posts up about every week or so. Links on book titles go to the appropriate Amazon page, while links on authors’ names will go to the author’s website if one exists. A reminder: if you do buy a book as a result of reading about it here, you need not get it from Amazon. If you do, I’ll get a tiny percentage of the purchase and I could use the cash, but I know Amazon isn’t everyone’s favorite corporation these days. Wherever you buy the book, though, if your budget allows, I encourage you to buy new rather than used so that the author gets a little of your money. Buying used is a great way to conserve resources, but that’s at least partly because that way writers don’t eat as much.
Gary is the first desert writer I ever read, as far as I can remember. When I was in exile in the DC area in the mid-1980s I read his books The Desert Smells Like Rain: A Naturalist in O’odham Country, about the enduring relationships between the Tohono O’odham (fka “Papago”) people and their armory of plants, and Gathering the Desert
, in which he engagingly profiles a dozen Sonoran Desert native plants. Reading them spurred my idle appreciation for arid lands into a full-blown love affair.
Gary’s an ethnobotanist, among other things — he studies and writes about human relationships with plants — and brings a profound cultural sensitivity to his writing, in part as a result of the fact that his studies have propelled him into some remarkably effective activism, working with native people to defend their living traditions. Aside from the books mentioned above, his book Tequila: A Natural and Cultural History — co-authored with Mexican tequila agronomist Ana G. Valenzuela-Zapata — and Singing the Turtles to Sea
, about the Seri Indians’ relationships with desert reptiles and sea turtles, are both absolutely wonderful.
My heart broke a little when I read of Ellen Meloy’s death a week or so after the fact. I’d first found her work in 1997, a collection of river-rafter essays called Raven’s Exile: A Season on the Green River. She wrote three other books before her far-too-premature passing. Each of the four is worth your dropping everything else to free up some time to read them. Right now, I think The Last Cheater’s Waltz: Beauty and Violence in the Desert Southwest
is my favorite, if only because I find it coming more and more to mind these days. It’s Meloy’s chronicle of an attempt to reconcile her adopted desert home’s sometimes terrifying beauty with the fact that that same landscape essentially gave birth to the nuclear weapon as both threat and concept. I read it most recently in 2005, while staying in the same room at the Mesa Refuge in which Meloy had stayed while writing it.
Her The Anthropology of Turquoise: Reflections on Desert, Sea, Stone, and Sky is her most challenging work: the unifying theme isn’t the gemstone turquoise so much as the color, and she lassoes a whole lot of disparate topics together thereby. It’s more cohesive than a collection of essays, but somewhat less so than most books conceived of as a single work. That caveat issued, it’s charming if you can keep up with it. The author’s recounting of her night spent in the Topock Maze is worth the price of admission all by itself. Her final work, Eating Stone: Imagination and the Loss of the Wild
, is pretty much to the desert bighorn what I hope my upcoming book will be to the Joshua tree: paean and elegy and description and rumination and personal odyssey.
First off, let me just say that Craig is a mensch. I say that because back before I really got it through my head that people actually read my blog, I poked mild fun at him here, explicitly out of envy at his writing and his experiences in the desert. I found out sometime afterward that he’d read the thing the day after I posted it, and yet not only did he not push me into a cenote somewhere, he’s since said a few very kind things about my writing. (See if you can figure out which of the comments on that post is his.)
The guy is prolific, and I haven’t caught up with his output. Part of the reason is that I keep rereading books of his that I’ve already gone through. His writing is complex and loaded and definitely withstands rereading. The past week I’ve been revisiting Soul of Nowhere losing myself in descriptions of Mexican canyons, pre-Columbian occupation sites with various archaeological treasures, and one rather alarming trek through a dim and precipitous cave in the Grand Canyon. That parody of mine was a gross exaggeration of one aspect of Craig’s work. The man is brave. Hiking three times as far as my water supply allows is pretty much the extent of my desert intrepitude. Craig is a climber and a caver; that adventure permeates his writing, blended finely with lyricism.
If you want to read one book that tells you what the desert is really like, that just flat out conveys the place, Craig’s The Secret Knowledge of Water will get you there. Water defines the desert, and not just by its absence. It carves the landscape, determines the course of washes and ancient paths, arranges the vegetation according to its whim. Maps of my part of the desert bear a hundred place names with the syllable “pah” in them: Ivanpah, Tonopah, Pahrump, Moapa, Pahranagat. “Pah” is water in the Numic languages, spoken by the Shoshone and Paiute, the Chemehuevi and Kawaiisu. Places were named for springs, for seeps and rills and rivers, and sometimes — as in Moapa, “Mosquito water,” for the qualities of the water to be found there. The scarcity of the stuff makes it so much more important, more prominent where it does occur. In the heat of summer, you can still find jewel-like pockets of water in the desert rocks, dark patches on the sand where a flash flood passed hours ago, beads of guttated water evaporating from the tips of yucca leaves before the sun comes up over the horizon. In time you learn to see it, to smell it, and if you’re lucky to find it. I picked up The Secret Knowledge of Water in 2001, sitting in a desert cabin with Becky and Zeke as Becky slept through a nasty sudden fever, and I did not move from my chair until I had finished. Craig takes the reader from flash-floods to waterpockets to tinajas — rock tanks that can hold thousands of gallons of sometimes viscid, sometimes fly-strewn, always absolutely wonderful water. More than any other work I’ve read, this one nails water in the desert: its scarcity, its preciousness not just to hikers but to wildlife, and its surprising tendency to be there under your nose without you realizing it, just up the next bend of the canyon or on the other side of the hill.
Next up: Terry Tempest Williams, Larry Hogue, Amy Irvine.
Feel free to share your own thoughts on these writers or others in comments, or suggest other writers for me to discuss!

