Over the past months I have been encountering J.B. MacKinnon’s engaging writing on natural history and historical ecology in Explore, The Walrus and on his blog. It has been refreshing and mentally invigorating to discover a young hip guy writing about natural history in a probing, intelligent and thought provoking way.
His recent story, A 10 Percent World, in the September 2010 issue of The Walrus, is a great example of the high quality material JBM is pumping out.
The story is fascinating journey through the tangled relationship humans have with nature. One anonymous comment left on the Walrus website said:
Thank you. This was so painfully, bitterly, achingly, wonderfully beautiful to read. So many writers seem to head to the extremes of romantic cliche or statistical litany when discussing the environment. This was authentic and unflinching and yet somehow hopeful. A well-constructed argument for an expanded vision that can only come from fully dissecting loss. This should be required reading for politicians, educators, urban planners, parents – everyone.
It hurt to read. It breaks my heart. But thank you for offering such a clear-headed voice to what will hopefully be a more useful discussion than we have had up to now about the environment.
If anybody ever says anything that complimentary about anything I write, I will be, um…well, I will be stoked.
MacKinnon is also the co-author of The 100 Mile Diet. The concept behind that book has quickly been woven into the fabric of our household speech, and our behaviour at food markets. His first book, Dead Man in Paradise, won him the Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction.
Needless to say, the guy is a great and provocative writer. But he is also a helluva nice guy. A few weeks ago he agreed to chat with me on Skype about writing, sharing some hard-won pearls of wisdom with me – a total stranger. So, who is J.B. MacKinnon? Well, I don’t really know, but I can tell you he is a good writer and a nice guy to boot.
Since I just returned from the west coast of BC – gobsmacked once again by the colossal profusion of life out there – this paragraph from A 10 Percent World was especially poignant for me:
…in an estuary…among the most isolated fjords of the British Columbia, I witnessed such teeming abundance that it left me unnerved as much as elevated. Salmon were bursting up the river, and the whole vocabulary of venery could be called into action: a sloth of bears, a route of wolves, a convocation of eagles, a pod of seals, a romp of otters, an unkindness of ravens, a murder of crows, a siege of herons, a richness of martens, a flock of seagulls. All were there. To say that the place had ten times the force of life of less remote rivers I have known strikes me as exaggeration only in the form of understatement.
I’ve singled out a paragraph that is personally meaningful because of my recent experiences, but the heart of the story has important ideas that are much more complex. But don’t take my word for it, just read it.
I am heading to the Banff Centre at the end of this week for the “Mountain writing” residency, where I will work hard for three weeks to develop my writing, in hopes that one day, I too can write something “painfully, bitterly, achingly, wonderfully beautiful to read.”