Peter Cashwell

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Kaethe
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Peter Cashwell

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The United States
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July 2019


Peter Cashwell grew up in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where the first stories he wrote for school were about woodpeckers, cardinals, and peregrine falcons, and he saw no particular reason to stop. He studied English and creative writing at the University of North Carolina and went on to work as a record store clerk, radio announcer, and musical accompanist for an improv comedy group. Since then, he has published two books, THE VERB 'TO BIRD' and ALONG THOSE LINES, both available from Paul Dry Books, and a variety of shorter pieces for periodicals (including The New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, Living Bird, and The Comics Journal), anthologies (Literary Cash, Basketball in America), and websites (Audubon.org). His newest book, THE AMAZI ...more

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Peter Cashwell I was driving through the mountains and had the not-exactly-revelatory realization that mountaintops look just like islands. From there, I started ima…moreI was driving through the mountains and had the not-exactly-revelatory realization that mountaintops look just like islands. From there, I started imagining islands that were floating, rather than resting atop undersea mountains, and before long I was writing a story about a magician, because I couldn't think of anyone else who'd want to have a floating island.(less)
Average rating: 3.78 · 145 ratings · 23 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Verb To Bird

3.91 avg rating — 117 ratings — published 2003 — 9 editions
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Along Those Lines: The Boun...

3.17 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 2014 — 3 editions
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The Amazing Q

3.50 avg rating — 4 ratings4 editions
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The Verb To Bird by Peter C...

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The Amazing Q
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The Life of a Boo...: Nonfiction 49 161 Oct 15, 2009 05:30AM  
David Quammen
“Imagine a single survivor, a lonely fugitive at large on mainland Mauritius at the end of the seventeenth century. Imagine this fugitive as a female. She would have been bulky and flightless and befuddled—but resourceful enough to have escaped and endured when the other birds didn’t. Or else she was lucky.
Maybe she had spent all her years in the Bambous Mountains along the southeastern coast, where the various forms of human-brought menace were slow to penetrate. Or she might have lurked in a creek drainage of the Black River Gorges. Time and trouble had finally caught up with her. Imagine that her last hatchling had been snarfed by a [invasive] feral pig. That her last fertile egg had been eaten by a [invasive] monkey. That her mate was dead, clubbed by a hungry Dutch sailor, and that she had no hope of finding another. During the past halfdozen years, longer than a bird could remember, she had not even set eyes on a member of her own species.
Raphus cucullatus had become rare unto death. But this one flesh-and-blood individual still lived. Imagine that she was thirty years old, or thirty-five, an ancient age for most sorts of bird but not impossible for a member of such a large-bodied species. She no longer ran, she waddled. Lately she was going blind. Her digestive system was balky. In the dark of an early morning in 1667, say, during a rainstorm, she took cover beneath a cold stone ledge at the base of one of the Black River cliffs. She drew her head down against her body, fluffed her feathers for warmth, squinted in patient misery. She waited. She didn't know it, nor did anyone else, but she was the only dodo on Earth. When the storm passed, she never opened her eyes. This is extinction.”
David Quammen, The Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an Age of Extinction

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message 2: by Kaethe (last edited Jul 23, 2019 06:24PM)

Kaethe And Kristjan Wager is here, too.


Kaethe About damn time, dude! Happy to see you in the neighborhood! I love having my favorite authors around! There, I've used up my exclamation points for the month, time to chill. Seriously, I am delighted to see your font. I've missed the book chatter with you, lo, these many years. Some of us have never quite taken to Twitter.


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