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Knowing Coyote
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18373 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1990 |
1,965 Words |
| Author
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Roger Welsch Roger Welsch is a contributing editor to The World & I. |
Skywater offers the reader some unsettlingly bad news and then some even worse news: The least of humanity is the best of us, and even that isn't much. On the other hand, there are coyotes, and insofar as we have within us some spark of the coyotes, we are redeemable. But Skywater is not a Walt Disney anthropomorphizing of the animal world, in which noble human beings come to the aid of unfortunates in the animal world, or (in the ones I really hate) where animals briefly act with the nobility of man.
The nobility in these two hundred tightly composed pages rests within the animal world. So does most of the intelligence and sensitivity. The human actors of Melinda Worth Popham's story who show signs of civilization are those who behave most like coyotes, those from whom we least expect culture - two scruffy hermits (Popham demonstrates remarkable skill by subtly transforming these two thorny derelicts from society, initially objects of our suspicion and even contempt, into objects of affection and admiration) and, of all things, the military crew on a gunnery range.
Popham's villains are more predictable: mining companies, trappers, police, tourists. Whatever souls there are in these pages belong to the animals and the few human beings who are closest to them.
Skywater's story is wonderfully simple: A bunch of desert coyotes depend on a watering hole provided by two old, disreputable retirees. Mine tailings eventually pollute the water so the couple must bring in their drinking water by the bottleful, which means that there is no more water in the horse tank, and the coyotes must move on, seeking Skywater, a primal idea that exists in
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