Dawn Light: Dancing with Cranes and Other Ways to Start the Day by Diane Ackerman

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2009
  • 208pp
  • Sales Rank: 28,595
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2009
    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Format: Hardcover, 208pp
    • Sales Rank: 28,595

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    Short of all those thanatosomniphobiacs out there -- the folks who fear dying in their sleep -- few hail the dawn with as much gratitude as Diane Ackerman. In the gathering light, her senses are alert and receptive to a parade of glories: mind-bending colors in the sky, the smell of a lover’s skin, the ruckus of birdsong, the morning glory itself -- not the flower (though that too), but a meteorological event: long rolling clouds, rushing forward while spinning backward, a nursery for thunderstorms and awe. She is also happy to have made it through another patch of dangerous darkness, and we nod in agreement, remembering how vulnerable we feel, how our skin crawls, when night is truly pitch black. Our reptilian core has not surrendered its dread of night, even in these light-polluted times. "It’s as survivors that we greet each day," she writes in this collection of luxurious, whither-where-I-wander meditations on the break of day. Then again, dawn is the time of duels and the clash of armies, when predators do their best work. Beauty, danger, sensuality -- just Ackerman’s cup of tea.

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    Synopsis

    A celebrated storyteller-poet-naturalist explores a year of dawns in her most personal book to date.

    The Washington Post - Wendy Smith

    Diane Ackerman wants us to slow down and pay attention. Human beings are "creatures stricken by meaning, afflicted with purpose," she laments; that's why it's essential to stop and savor those instants when "time suddenly snags on a simple Wow!" It's easy to live in the moment when you're immersed in Ackerman's glorious prose, studded with arresting phrases and breathtakingly beautiful images…"I love being part of the saga of life on earth," she writes, "and both suffering and change feature large in that adventure." Yet the impressions that linger after closing her book are not of suffering but of joy, not of change, but of the flow of incident halted, over and over, by the masterful hand of an artist who sketches with tender words the small miracles of a vast universe. "Just show up," she urges us. "Presence is always a present, a gift." Her gift to us is the sheer pleasure of seeing the world through her loving eyes.

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    Biography

    Diane Ackerman is the best-selling author of A Natural History of the Senses and many other books, most recently the best-selling The Zookeeper's Wife. She lives in Ithaca, New York, and Palm Beach, Florida.

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