Animals Strike Curious Poses

Animals Strike Curious Poses

by Elena Passarello

Narrated by Elena Passarello

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

Animals Strike Curious Poses

Animals Strike Curious Poses

by Elena Passarello

Narrated by Elena Passarello

Unabridged — 5 hours, 38 minutes

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Overview

Beginning with Yuka, a 39,000 year old mummified woolly mammoth recently found in the Siberian permafrost, each of the 16 essays in Animals Strike Curious Poses investigates a different famous animal named and immortalized by humans. Modeled loosely after a medieval bestiary, these witty, playful, whipsmart essays traverse history, myth, science, and more, bringing each beast vibrantly to life.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Helen Macdonald

I've spent decades reading books on the roles animals play in human cultures, but none have ever made me think, and feel, as much as this one. It's a devastating meditation on our relationship to the natural world. It might be the best book on animals I've ever read. It's also the only one that's made me laugh out loud…Animals Strike Curious Poses speaks of and for the voiceless hordes with whom we share the earth, shows us how we make sense of them and, crucially, how they make sense for us. "Up from the mummy on that ice-cave slab comes a linked chain of animals, all of them pointing backward," she writes of the frozen mammoth. That's what she is doing here, forging a chain of essays with themes that link and snap together, so that upon reading one essay, the others are carried up and along with it, the clear analytic coherence running through its wildly disparate essay forms being perhaps this book's fiercest grace.

Publishers Weekly

★ 01/02/2017
Passarello (Let Me Clear My Throat) traces stories of famous animals and how they reshape our thinking about humanity in this stunning collection of 17 brief essays. Some read as traditional essays, such as her mediations on the need for new language in an age of mass extinction, the way that artist Albrecht Dürer’s wildly inaccurate rhinoceros prints influenced popular imagination in 16th century Europe, and the author’s personal encounter with a deformed goat who was billed as “Lancelot, the Living Unicorn” by Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in 1985. Others are more genre-blending: Passarello inhabits the mind of Charles Darwin’s pet tortoise and imagines Koko the signing gorilla retelling the infamous “Aristocrats” joke in her limited vocabulary. Passarello’s keen wit is on display throughout as she raises questions about the uniqueness of humans. Perhaps the most stunning work is her bricolage timeline of murderous elephants in America, which aligns their crimes and executions with the rise of electricity and capital punishment. The entire collection satisfies through a feast of surprising juxtapositions and gorgeous prose. (Mar.)

From the Publisher

"The 10 Best Essay Collections of the Decade," Runner-Up, Literary Hub
“21 new and classic books to keep you in touch with the natural world,” The Los Angeles Times
"It might be the best book on animals I’ve ever read." —The New York Times Book Review
"100 Notable Books of 2017," The New York Times
“11 New Books We Recommend This Week,” The New York Times, Editor’s Choice
“10 Page-Turners for 2017,” Martha Stewart Living
"Best Books 2017," Publishers Weekly
“The 20 Best Nature Books of the 2000s,” Inside Hook
“The 14 Best Female Essayists to Read Now,” Signature
2018 Oregon Book Award Winner for Creative Nonfiction


“Stunning. . . . Passarello’s keen wit is on display throughout as she raises questions about the uniqueness of humans. . . . A feast of surprising juxtapositions and gorgeous prose.” 

Publishers Weekly, starred review

“This phenomenal collection documents the lives of particular animals from a wide range of species. . . . Passarello treats her subjects with dextrous care, weaving narratives together in a way that investigates, honors, and complicates her subjects. . . . Passarello has created a consistently original, thoroughly researched, altogether fascinating compendium.”   

Booklist, starred review

"Passarello presents biographies of famous animals, from an ancient mummified mammoth to Mr. Ed and Cecil the Lion.”   

The New York Times, "100 Notable Books of 2017"

"I’ve spent decades reading books on the roles animals play in human cultures, but none have ever made me think, and feel, as much as this one. It’s a devastating meditation on our relationship to the natural world. It might be the best book on animals I’ve ever read. It’s also the only one that’s made me laugh out loud. . . . [Passarello is] a master of the essay form." 

—Helen MacDonald for The New York Times Book Review

“There is an agile intelligence at work . . . as [Passarello] makes connections among disparate elements and wields keen perceptions on the creatures she encounters. There are some real dazzlers. Passarello manages to chronicle humanity's cavalier exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals without getting preachy in the process—no mean feat.” 

Kirkus Reviews

"Animals Strike Curious Poses turns the bestiary inside out, fashioning intoxicating and animated meditations on our penchant for ownership via naming, our drive to saddle the world and its creatures with our weary, ponderous patronymics, and the attendant and cockeyed faux-fame." 

—"Flight Patterns: Reading of the Creatures of the Air" by Matthew Gavin Frank, LitHub

“Each essay is a bonbon as delicious as any Instagram animal pic.” 

—"21 new and classic books to keep you in touch with the natural world,” The Los Angeles Times

“[An] extraordinary book. . . Although these animal case histories lodge under the label of 'essay', Passarello tests and stretches the form in thrilling ways.” 

The Guardian

“A work of genius . . . Whether you are an animal lover or not, this is a terrific read, burning with relevance to our world, by an exciting new talent.” 

The Guardian, "Best Books of 2017"

"Elena Passarello’s essay collection Animals Strike Curious Poses offers readers a number of windows on the connection between humans and animals — and ventures into some memorable corners of history along the way. " 

—“The 20 Best Nature Books of the 2000s,” Inside Hook

“A gorgeous and peculiar collection of essays about famous animals and the ways we interact with them.” —Tin House online

"I jump up and down about [this book] whenever I get the chance. . . . It definitely requires an actively engaged reader because of the shifts of styles throughout, but I enjoy the trust she puts in her readers, and I can feel how her hands had to get dirty to craft such artistic pieces." 

—Abby Manzella, Book Marks

“Passarello is brilliant, and these essays exploring famous animals . . . will not disappoint in quirkiness, intelligence, and delight.” 

—National Book Foundation Executive Director Lisa Lucas, Martha Stewart Living, "10 Page-Turners for 2017"

"Strange and wonderful."  

Brevity, online

"This is a beautiful and layered book whose allusions, content, and design make it a natural-born alpha in the latest pack of animal-themed creative nonfiction. . . . Passarello has set a new standard for how we can write about animals real and imaginary—professors of nature writing and lovers of mythical beasts, take note."  

Kenyon Review

"The ultimate effect of Passarello’s work is an empathetic duet that reaches both forward and back with gentle humor and sparking wit, a perfect companion against the dark." 

—Holly M. Wendt, for Ploughshares on the essay "Jeoffrey"

"Elena Passarello's new essay collection Animals Strike Curious Poses is a dazzling bestiary about animals famous in their time and humans' relationships with them." 

Largehearted Boy, "Favorite Nonfiction of 2017"

"The essays in Elena Passarello's Animals Strike Curious Poses are technically about animals you'll find in history books, but really they are about the worlds the creatures inhabit and the ways people intersect with them. That, and they're fiercely fun."  

Marie Claire

"Animals Strike Curious Poses is a delight for all of the senses. . . . Passarello's prose evokes a visceral response all on its own. . . . The essays range in structure, style, and length but all carry an emotional heft and lovely, sometimes aching, prose."  

Signature Reads

"[P]layful, shrewd and illuminating."  

Financial Times, "Animals Strike Curious Poses by Elena Passarello—call of the wild"

"Passarello is an expert at distilling a wealth of texts into the most essential, compelling statistics or most startling, hilarious quotes. . .  . She explores and interrogates the implications of the many desires and fears we have projected onto animals—the fears they reflect back to us, and the ways we understand the will to live through them." 

Southern Humanities Review online

"Packed with an assortment of facts, myths, and unexpected connections, each of the book’s essays is a deeply researched ride that presents an almost staggering amount of information. But the essays are also highly playful. . . . Throughout, Passarello works as a sort of critical ringmaster, announcing both the sideshow act and our short-sighted desire for it. She entertains as she exhibits our missteps, and points to the ways we project onto—and define ourselves in relation to—animals." 

Portland Mercury

"The thoroughly researched book teems with lyrical language, humor, ingenious stylistic choices and smartly drawn connections." 

Pittsburgh City Paper

"Elena Passarello writes of human-animal relationships with all the weight of mighty literature that she can bring to bear. That she attempts so bold a feat shows that this border country can be explored in unapologetically literary terms and it is worthy of deep seriousness of purpose." 

New Statesman

"Passrello's language is compressed, poetic, and, at times, profound. . . . [T]he book is also irreverently fun." 

The Chattahoochee Review

Animals Strike Curious Poses turns the bestiary inside out, holds the mummified mammoth heart up against our own, and, from the braided ventricles, springboards into intoxicating and animated meditations on our penchant for ownership via naming, our drive to saddle the world and its creatures with our weary, ponderous patronymics, and the attendant and cockeyed faux-fame. This book is a gift to us from one of the best, most important, and most exciting essayists of the 21st century.” 

—Matthew Gavin Frank, author of The Mad Feast and Preparing the Ghost: An Essay Concerning the Giant Squid and Its First Photographer

“This is an astonishingly good collection.” 

—Stephen Sparks, Point Reyes Books, Point Reyes, CA

“Let’s face it: animals are interesting, words are interesting. Put them together in arresting match-ups—Mozart and starling, Darwin and refugee tortoise, spider and astronaut, gorilla and lexicon, ‘endling’ and genetic futurist—as Passarello does in this delicious collection, and you get a gorgeous picture of a curious mind engaged beyond self-interest. As she digs around in the animal images buried inside us, she finds that ‘It is as if every animal a human brain has ever seen, it has swallowed.’ And we get to share here this fine and nourishing meal, artfully prepared, with her playful intelligence for company at the table. I am now forever in love with starlings and spiders. . . ” 

—Alison Hawthorne Deming, author of Zoologies

“Passarello is resplendent in her encyclopedic knowledge of natural history with a fierce and feral intelligence. Mammoth hunting, spiders in space, the last living tortoise from the Darwin expedition—the magnificent animal essays in this utterly absorbing collection shimmer with complexities about human nature with extraordinary depth and music. The end result is simply superb—a must for anyone who values wisdom served up with verve and a genuine adoration for the creatures with which we share this flawed and dazzling world.” 

—Aimee Nezhukumatathil

“Elena Passarello’s wildly inventive, meticulously-rendered meditations are their own kind of perfect animal. This is a hair-raisingly beautiful book.” 

—Amy Fusselman

“In Animals Strike Curious Poses, Elena Passarello spins fantastic, wondrous, and true tall tales about species big and small. Her essays are dream-spaces of imagery and ideas. . . . This book will leave little doubt that Passarello is one our country’s most gifted young prose writers.” 

—Héctor Tobar, New York Times bestselling author of Deep Down Dark and The Barbarian Nurseries

“What Rachel Carson called ‘the problem of sharing our earth with other creatures’ is still one of the most pressing problems of our time, but only a few individual creatures are known to all of us by name. Elena Passarello’s witty, insightful, exquisite essays reintroduce us to these famous animals, and find new meaning in their fascinating stories.” 

—Michelle Nijhuis, writer for National Geographic and blogger for The New Yorker

“[Passarello has] an unwavering eye for detail. She tells the truth but tells it slant. Her essays momentarily unbalance us or demand that we look at the world or some aspect of it in a new way.”  

—Oregon State UniversityProfessor Jeff Miller

Kirkus Reviews

2016-11-07
An essayist populates a bestiary of an ark with famous animals from history, all celebrated by humans even as we harnessed and exploited them.Passarello (English/Oregon State Univ.; Let Me Clear My Throat: Essays, 2012) welds eccentric stylistics, which can feel rather too fanciful or ethereal, to more grounded and less "poetic" deliberations on varied well-known species while revealing that we do not know as much about them as we thought. The former do not read as essays so much as peculiar little anthropomorphic meditations, some of which presuppose areas of knowledge on the reader's part while providing meager enlightenment of their own. They tend toward the allegorical, peppered with all manner of similes and labored metaphors, which work only occasionally. What are we to make of such lines as, "the stews downriver had less fornication," or the curious amalgam of elephant and electricity in "Jumbo II"? Doubtless these installments are matters of taste, though some readers may wonder at the point of it all. Thankfully, the majority of the book is more concrete, definitely more engaging, and decidedly more edifying. Despite Passarello's tendency to ramble, there is an agile intelligence at work in the best pieces, as she makes connections among disparate elements and wields keen perceptions on the creatures she encounters. There are some real dazzlers. Particularly impressive are "Vogel Staar," a meld of Mozart and starling, "Four Horsemen," an anatomical evaluation of our equine friends and the partnership we share, and "Celia," an elegy for the disturbing pace of extinctions, past and present. Another fine piece, "Lancelot," uses autobiographical elements to prime a salvo on the commercialization of animals and the hollowness of zoos. Even Beatrix Potter takes her lumps. Passarello manages to chronicle humanity's cavalier exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals without getting preachy in the process—no mean feat. If only the entirety of the book reflected the gifts the author demonstrates at her best.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176280715
Publisher: Everand Productions
Publication date: 09/14/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
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