High Tide In Tucson by Barbara Kingsolver
This is a collection of Kingsolver 's essays, choc-a-bloc with her wit and humour, her love of the animal kingdom, including.javalinas with whom she has a long running feud over their.treatment of her garden until she realises they came first and she was 'late to the party'.
She stresses that we are members of the animal kingdom and sometimes in danger of forgetting that, that we are driven by subterranean drives, hidden ebbs and flows that push us onward in spite of ourselves. We despair of events and changes and misfortunes (and she has had her share) but somehow those hidden tides propel us forward and we survive.
The best example of this is the essay centred on Buster the hermit crab. Transported from the seaside to Tucson, Arizona she discovers that the crab reacts to tides as he did at the coast. But there is no tide in Tucson. But the crab doesn't care - he goes into tidal mode hilariously and Kinsolver recognises the same impulse in humans.to survive, to make your world recognisable again after disasters strike. We are crabs and animals too and should remember it. 'Make me a good animal today".she cries.
Other essays explore the same theme. She admires.Spanish mothers because of the naturalness of their relationship with babies and children who are more integrated into public life than is popular elsewhere. Many essays deal with naturalness: love potions. babies, relics of the past like cooking pots hundreds of years old: still needed, still necessary. Some things never change.
In beautiful prose she introduces us to lessons learned from landscapes and.historical artefacts and animals and sunsets all leading to a benign and untroubled attitude to life.