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Sharman
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Jan 08, 2015 11:23AM

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https://nplusonemag.com/issue-21/revi...
I found it on The Rumpus, if that link doesn't work. Anyway, Dames is irresistible.

So here it is February 3. The sunrise was pink and orange and the clouds turning yellow now. I am working on my science fiction Knocking on Heaven's Door coming out this fall, just re-reading before I hand the text over to the copy editor. But I'll check back here every hour or so!

This is being presented Friday (6th) afternoon at the Arizona/New Mexico Section of The Wildlife Society meeting in Las Cruces.






I am engaged in tracking and reporting precipitation as part of the CoCoRaHS network at my home since 2008 and this practice has been a great teacher of climate variation. Extremes are the norm at least in southwest NM! Same is true of insect and animal populations. I keep noticing things I have never seen before and that is after living here for over 30 years. Two years ago I noticed an abundance of black beetles, epicauta pennsylvanica, chewing on baby mullein. Digging further into these guys I learn their larva jump onto passing bees and get transported to the hive to feed on eggs and larva. They also search out grasshopper egg pods where they become immobile legless grubs before pupating into adults the following summer. Next I had to learn about our native bees and how sometimes the introduction of european honey bees can have a negative impact on some native bees, particularly bumble bees. As you are probably aware, last summer we had a huge crop of grasshoppers. I got ahold of "A Manual of Grasshoppers of NM" and began scratching the surface of their biology; the wide variety of species, life cycles, population dynamics and distribution. Nothing on culinary uses but that will be fun to explore. My favorite and super abundant last year is the black male or ebony grasshopper, Boopedon nubilum or BOOPIE. It loves blue grama and other grasses but leaves the garden alone. When it flies it clacks and the hind tibia displays a beautiful creamy red color. The female of the species is larger, gray-green in color and doesn't fly. Nature is so fascinating, my apologies for getting carried away!


I am enga..."
Joseph, how neat to see you here. Yes, it's a beautiful day. I just went for a run and left behind my long sleeves soon out the door. The beauty of some of the grasshoppers here...the big lubbers and the 1960s psychedelic Painted Grasshopper. And it's a gift to find such pleasure in grasshoppers...because there are so many! You live in such an abundant world.

Hi, Mary! I know what you mean. Diversity in everything. And one of the first things, perhaps, that we need to do as writers is discover how we work best--where, what, why. Discover our own process and then fit that into our lives.



I'm almost done reading diary of a citizen scientist and have enjoyed it hugely. There is a lot of appealing whimsy in it and I appreciate that, plus I have never seen a tiger beetle, or if I have I didn't know what I was looking at or, more likely, never looked! I will now! I know that citizen scientists have been contributing to society's knowledge for generations. In Alaska for many years the observations and well known information of Alaska Natives was recorded in stories and was depended upon by them for much of their life's activities. The "scientists" would not use that information because it was not recorded and measured by trained technicians or scientists so was "unreliable", but over the past several decades they began to understand this information was a vast accumulation of such things as ocean/shore interactions, sea ice conditions, animal life, weather, etc. etc. and was very useful. 10,000 years of observations passed down generation to generation were worth a great deal!

On the heels of your success with tiger beetles and writing as a citizen scientist, do you see a "Diary Part 2" in the future?


Hi, Merritt, how great to hear from you! And that is such an interesting point--the natural history observations and "citizen science" work done for generations by Native Americans. I did remember to note in my book that I was the first person to document the first instars of the Western red-bellied tiger beetle, not necessarily the first person to ever seen them--thinking of all the Hohokam and Tohono O'odham and Apaches who came before me. See you this Saturday, I think!

Hi, Mona, I would definitely go to the Nature's Notebook site--just google those words--and see if observing the life cycle of plants and animals in your backyard is appealing. The LA Natural History Museum also has a number of citizen science projects, and it would be fun to see what they are doing.


On the heels of your success with tiger beetles and writing as a citizen scientist, do you see a "Diary Part 2" in the future?"
Maybe a few books out. Yes! But my next nonfiction book builds on a previous book called Hunger: An Unnatural History and concerns the introduction of high-caloric, fortified ready-to-use food, designed specifically to cure and prevent childhood malnutrition, into the commercial market of the world's one billion poor and malnourished. Capitalism and snack food! What some food aid experts believe is a solution to chronic global childhood malnutrition (a quarter of the world's children.) Like my other nonfiction books, I will be using a lot of research skills and entering into areas into which I am not an expert...



I have an acquaintance who has a motion sensitive camera. Maybe he'll let me borrow it. I know we'd catch coyotes as I see them quite often. I am sure I would catch creatures that I'd be surprised to see. I just joined Nature's Notebook--and will definitely look into the Natural Museum. Like the idea of documenting spiders. One aspect of your book that pulled me in is the fascination w/ the tiger beetles. And how you share your intrigue as it grows exponentially. You really capture it in the last few lines before Oct. 11 (page 70.)

p.s. I will include the quote: "The physics of beauty is really the biology of beauty, and the biology of beauty is what we claim as our own, what we build inside our bodies to resonate with what we see outside in the world. Now I understand that almost everywhere I go, for the rest of my life, I will see tiger beetles. Everywhere I go, because of that, the world will be more beautiful."

Question: do you take voluminous notes, then pile them up in front of you and start “writing the book”? Or do you flesh out the abovementioned layers as the days, the excursions, the experiments and the insights progress over time? Or something in between? Hard for a fiction writer, even one working within the strictures of a particular dramatic form, to grasp the challenge of sorting, choosing, ordering so MUCH information and keeping one's head far enough above the fray to see where you're going.


That's a good question, Jim. I take enough notes and absorb enough information about my subject (tiger beetles or previous subjects like butterflies) so that I have a framework, a big picture--so that I feel centered in the subject. Then I start writing and keep consulting and keep double-checking facts and details. This book, of course, takes place over time and was very much a journey. I wrote it as it happened, and that energy of present tense and immediacy was part of the book's energy. I also had a structure in place--a linear one--and that helped me organize the material. Of course, I didn't really know what was going to happen next. Would I find the larval burrow holes of the Western red-bellied tiger beetle? Would I meet a mountain lion in the wild? But as a writer I have learned to trust that whatever happens can be made interesting through language and reflection--I have learned to trust the serendipity of discovery. Other books have been organized differently. I think, in essence, I need a general grasp of what I am doing and a good sense of my structure and approach. Then I need to let the work evolve and grow organically out of that...

It would be easy to say, given your description, that it's easier than fiction, that you don't face the blank page in quite the same way when you do one of your novels -- and maybe for you, that's true. But (if I may flatter you some more) writing this good has to be a mega-effort even if your feet, your eyes and your curiosity take the place of "Sh!t, what happens now??" I envy you your focus. Great book!

So sorry, I missed 2/3 discussion, and this is a tad tardy. As of yet, i have not gotten your latest book, but i will soon. Your work is very special. The concept of "citizen science" was supported and inspired by my biology professors at the college i attended way back in the 90s. We learned that in the world of biology all "studies" are about paying close attention to a species and its habitat, and recording frequencies, changes, methods, and whatever else we notice. Keeping good records and playing with the results in the computer. Any person can, if they want, become a scientist of sorts which is exciting. My question is (and could be answered if i had your book) how many months or years of research do you perform and what are your favorite "sources" of information (i.e., databases, text books, journals, most recent or a mixture of historic and new, local or worldwide). And what decisions do you make for keeping or tossing certain pieces of information? Thank you!





I don't know about loving the act of writing. That starts all of us out, of course. But for me, and everyone's different, I've been doing it so long, it's simply what I do. I can be proud of what I do and happy when I've done it well but do I love it? Hmm. Jury's still out. It's what I do. It defines me. I don't know if I'll ever be able to stop. Sometimes, I'd like to.



Beautiful last line, Rose.


Writing is action. That's another great line.
