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Field Notes: The Grace Note of the Canyon Wren

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In this collection of twelve stories, Barry Lopez—the National Book Award–winning author of Arctic Dreams and one of our most admired writers—evokes the longing we feel for beauty in our relationships with one another, with the past, and with nature.

An anthropologist traveling with an aboriginal people finds that, because of his aggressive desire to understand them, they remain always disturbingly unknowable. A successful financial consultant, failing to discover his roots in Africa, jogs from Connecticut to the Pacific Ocean in order to forge an indigenous connection to the American landscape. A paleontologist is haunted by visions of wildlife in a vacant lot in Manhattan. In simple, crystalline prose, Lopez evokes a sense of the magic and marvelous strangeness of the world, and a deep compassion for the human predicament.

176 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1994

About the author

Barry Lopez

59 books864 followers
Barry Holstun Lopez is an American author, essayist, and fiction writer whose work is known for its environmental and social concerns.

Lopez has been described as "the nation's premier nature writer" by the San Francisco Chronicle. In his non-fiction, he frequently examines the relationship between human culture and physical landscape, while in his fiction he addresses issues of intimacy, ethics and identity.

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5 stars
193 (38%)
4 stars
176 (35%)
3 stars
100 (20%)
2 stars
24 (4%)
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3 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews
Profile Image for Lauren .
1,796 reviews2,491 followers
May 30, 2017
Contemplative and melancholy in tone, each vignette brings into focus a single character that lives 'outside' in some way - the hermit, the "old maid", the caretaker - outside of society, outside of the norms, truly outside and off the grid.



It's a beautiful and thoughtful collection, weaving in themes of nature and animals right alongside human nature. This was a perfect introduction to Lopez, and I look forward to diving into his collected works that now span several decades.
Profile Image for Shirleynature.
234 reviews68 followers
May 23, 2020
This is my first time reading Barry Lopez; getting to hear the author's voice and his intended inflections for his own words really enhances the experience!
Profile Image for Matt.
526 reviews15 followers
May 22, 2019
While I understand what Lopez was going for here, it didn't work for me—and felt more dated than it is (1994).
Profile Image for Alyson Hagy.
Author 15 books103 followers
January 21, 2021
Barry Lopez has been an important writer for me for decades. I'm going to miss his voice very, very much. ARCTIC DREAMS is an absolute classic. My relationship to his short fiction has been varied from the start. His stories are clear in their purpose and often admirably innovative. He tries lots of things, as he does in FIELD NOTES. He takes risks. Sometimes he fails. Sometimes he succeeds. As I reread him now in the wake of his too-early departure from the world, my reactions to these stories remain uneven. I love some of them. Others (perhaps because they're dated?) make me want to close the covers for a while. That's okay by me. It suggests I'm being challenged as a reader. I think Barry Lopez would approve of that.
Profile Image for Sara Snarr.
262 reviews6 followers
January 27, 2016
I've read some Barry Lopez before but it's been a while. I was disappointed by this collection. It was one story after another with the same theme: arrogant materialistic intellectual has a transformative experience discovering mystical beyond-believable miracles out in nature. I love nature writing, but this was a let down.
Profile Image for Ryan Mishap.
3,522 reviews70 followers
October 29, 2009
This collection of short stories proves that Lopez is underrated as a fiction writer--oh sure, he's won awards, but his nonfiction overshadows the little gems he writes (see Resistance for an excellent book).

As the title suggests, most of the stories deal with people who are intent on observing, and, doing so, they fail to participate in the life aorund them; fail to live in nature and remain apart from it.

The second theme that emerges involves people who become disconnected from others because of their own disapproval, biases.

Top notch.
Profile Image for Ryan.
25 reviews42 followers
December 9, 2013
Amazing short stories. There seems to be a theme in this collection, that the main character doesn't always 'get' the situation they are in, that they are distracted or can't see the deeper meaning to what's being communicated.
Profile Image for Nick Burdick.
193 reviews2 followers
April 27, 2021
Lopez is best known for nonfiction like Arctic Dreams and Of Wolf and Man, but he’s also an accomplished writer of fiction. Field Notes is a set of short stories that have a common theme: each of the characters is changed by their connection with the land. A botanist who has lost his way with his family begins to find redemption by returning to the roots of his practice; a sick teacher finds peace before death by weaving a tapestry of the Grand Canyon; an archeologist forms an emotional connection with an empty lot, and it changes the way she relates to the entire city. The stories are small but potent reminders of the deep relationships we hold with the landscape around us. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for B. Jean.
1,367 reviews26 followers
October 23, 2022
I read in Robert Macfarlane's books that he really admires Barry Lopez, so I decided to give a few of his books a try. I'm currently still at the beginnings of Arctic Dreams, but I decided to listen to this on a whim today while working on art.

The short stories were very good - though evoking. Except, I'm not sure if this has aged amazingly. Some of the language used was suspect, and the ongoing trope of the mystic "other" made me a little uncomfortable.

The first story was my favorite - no contest.
Profile Image for Lee.
986 reviews33 followers
June 6, 2024
A short collection of short stories by Barry Lopez, most of which concerned indigenous folks and the land in which they live. The only story which toughed me was the second story in the collection, “Perryland,” where an academic makes a journey to Greenland alone to study what happens to dead animals and he finds himself somehow This story was quite spooky and I did not see it coming. The other stories were mildly interesting, but nothing to write home about.
Profile Image for Emmy.
11 reviews
May 11, 2022
I wish I could give this one a higher rating. Some of these stories are truly breathtaking—“Within Birds’ Hearing,” “Empira’s Tapestry,” “Pearyland,” and “The Runner” all feel like a perfect capsule of a moment. But there are several more that feel incomplete, almost like they aren’t confident enough to be short stories. Like so many MFA-ish story collections, there is such a focus on keeping the stories tight that they don’t take the time to resolve and satisfy.
Profile Image for Annie.
278 reviews44 followers
April 11, 2022
Barry Lopez is a beautiful naturalist writer whether it’s in fiction or non- but the problem with fiction is that for some reason fiction writers feel obliged to write sex and that is to everyone’s detriment. You don’t have to write sex if you’re bad at writing it! Stick to what you’re good at! (Read Arctic Dreams)
Profile Image for Lori.
Author 3 books2 followers
December 13, 2020
I haven’t read a book filled with such beauty in a while. Short stories often invoke this for me and these encompass the natural world as a theme and breathe a beauty into their compact yet vivid narrative. Definitely one of my favorites. I shall seek out more of Barry Lopez.
493 reviews
June 6, 2023
Short essays. I couldn’t tell if there was a theme. It felt a bit like poetry—gorgeous language and descriptions but what’s the point? The essays jumped around. Different voices, different characters, different styles. Some adult topics.
Profile Image for Kevin.
169 reviews1 follower
December 8, 2018
The first 50 or so pages are fantastic and the rest isn't bad, either.

plus 1 star for the note on type
Profile Image for Robert Morgan Fisher.
623 reviews18 followers
April 30, 2019
Exquisite, accessible short stories with Nature as the through-line. A true master of the form. What Gary Snyder is to poetry, Barry Lopez is to the short story.
184 reviews
September 22, 2021
Lopez does it again with short, first-person stories about human connections with the natural world. Enjoyable.
Profile Image for Laura.
1,485 reviews30 followers
September 27, 2021
Barry López is such a talented writer- some of these were really good. I always appreciate hearing about his thoughts and experiences.
May 28, 2021
A somber book of stories about people seeking things in nature or themselves or both. Sometimes finding those things or not. A lot of reflection on ethics, actions and choices "outdoorsy" folks deal with.
My favorite was the last story "The Runner," but all the stories are somewhat similar in style. A feeling of melancholy filled most pages even when characters experienced "Aha!" moments. An engaging enough book for me that I'll try and read the classic "Arctic Dreams" since this was my introduction to Barry Lopez.
22 reviews1 follower
November 15, 2011
Let Barry immerse you in the worlds he creates through words…
Field Notes by Barry Lopez. Vintage Books, New York, 1994

Barry Lopez masters the art of creating a picture in the mind of the viewer in this fiction piece. His descriptions are so vivid and detailed that the reader can literally see the surroundings around the characters. Field Notes is broken into 12 short stories that bring the reader into completely different settings with each. There are common themes throughout each short story, however, that make the entire piece feel connected, and make the stories make sense together. Nature, isolation, the protagonist overcoming some sort of obstacle, and of course beautiful descriptions are prominent in each of the stories in Field Notes.

The introduction Within Birds’ Hearing begins with a lone narrator, facing exhaustion, describing the scenery around him as he hikes. When nightfall’s, he hears the sound of a canyon wren. He follows the sound, and finds water, ensuring his survival for another day.
Teal Creek is about a man who knows his way around the wilderness, and builds cabins in the best locations, and who fascinates the narrator. The narrator feels compelled to visit him some time later in his life, and is not sure why, and is surprised what he finds when he gets there.
Empira’s Tapestry is about a teacher named Empira who boarded with the narrator, and when she became sick, she began to weave a beautiful tapestry that would become a central item upon her death.
The Open lot is about a lot in a city that the narrator finds alluring as well as peace in. She watches the lot slowly change and fill with life, until one day she goes on a trip, and upon her return, finds the lot completely different.
Conversation is a short story that is a dialogue between two friends, revealing one of them is in politics, and has changed his beliefs to further his career.
Pearyland is about the narrator inquiring about a strangers experience visiting the place where animals’ spirits go before being reincarnated.
The Negro in the Kitchen is about an encounter between the narrator and a Negro he finds in his kitchen asking for food. The Negro and the narrator talk for a while and the Negro impresses the narrator speaking about what he is embarking on and why he appeared in his kitchen.
The Entreaty of the Wiideema is about the narrator meeting a tribe and living with them for a time and learning to understand them.
Homecoming is about a mans revelation that he has immersed himself in his work too much, and that he does not know his family anymore, and his first steps at making amends.
Sonora is about the narrator being commissioned to study sand dunes outside of the investors’ home, and his struggles with slowly becoming deaf, and the constant feelings of isolation.
Lessons from the Wolverine is about the narrator discovering information about animals and his surroundings, not through reading, but by observation, and keeping himself around the subject he is studying.
The Runner is about a man who wants to reconnect with his sister, and realizes she is this extraordinary woman whom he wished he had not lost contact with.

The characters Lopez creates are easy to comprehend and follow. His voice in each story shines as he eloquently plays out his short stories that could easily be written into longer pieces. Praise for Field Notes, as it challenges the reader to think about our world in the way the characters see it.
113 reviews10 followers
February 8, 2021
Beautiful stories that encompass paradox, mystery, and the American West.
Profile Image for ༺Kiki༻.
1,998 reviews127 followers
July 26, 2018
You might also enjoy:

Fiction
The Living
The Lives of Rocks
The Hermit's Story: Stories
Man V. Nature

Essays
Upstream: Select Essays
The Abundance: Narrative Essays Old and New


★★★★☆ Introduction: Within Birds’ Hearing
★★★★☆ Teal Creek
★★★★★ Empira’s Tapestry
★★★★☆ The Open Lot
★★★★☆ Conversation
★★★★☆ Pearyland
★★★★★ The Negro in the Kitchen
★★★★★ The Entreaty of the Wiideema
★★★★☆ Homecoming
★★★★☆ Sonora
★★★★★ Lessons from the Wolverine
★★★★☆ The Runner
Profile Image for Kevin Spicer.
73 reviews4 followers
March 16, 2014
Favorite line: "I departed-my body deft, taut-with a clear sense of where I should go: the route, the dangers, the distances by day. But then the landscape became vast."

Each of these stories speaks of how our desire to know, to analyze, to categorize, to enact some method of control in our lives is often overwhelmed by something emotive and infinite lurking within ourselves and the land. Moving into that state of unknowing is a movement toward consolation and ultimately, hope, while resistance to it is a retreat into shallower, more navigable but less rewarding waters.

Classic Lopez, a good mix of characters, curious grad students, unorthodox scientist, estranged family members, and friendly hermits, all inhabiting the diverse landscapes of North America.
Profile Image for Danny Hesser.
10 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2015
This was the first book we discussed in a course entitled Literature of the Earth. I think it's the first in the magical realism genre I've read, and also the first by Lopez. I was blown away. Characters in each story are transformed somehow due to their interface with nature. Points of view vary, as well as the way Lopez tells a story. Several left me wondering about things well after putting the book down. I borrowed it from the library and took copious notes in a separate "reading journal," a great exercise I'd recommend.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews

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