Concord|Local Event
Mother, Creature, Kin: What We Learn from Nature's Mothers in a Time of Unraveling

Gibson's Bookstore presents essayist Chelsea Steinauer-Scudder with her new book about the natural world, Mother, Creature, Kin: What We Learn from Nature's Mothers in a Time of Unraveling, which asks: what can other-than-human creatures teach us about mothering, belonging, caregiving, loss, and resiliency?
What does it mean to be a mother in an era of climate catastrophe? And what can we learn from the plants and creatures who mother at the edges of their world's unraveling?
Becoming a mother in this time means bringing life into a world that appears to be coming undone. Drawing upon ecology, mythology, and her own experiences as a new mother, Steinauer-Scudder confronts what it means to "mother": to do the good work of being in service to the living world. What if we could all mother the places we live and the beings with whom we share those places? And what if they also mother us?
In prose that teems with longing, lyricism, and knowledge of ecology, Steinauer-Scudder writes of the silent flight and aural maps of barn owls, of nursing whales, of real and imagined forests, of tidal marshes, of ancient single-celled organisms, and of newly planted gardens. The creatures inhabiting these stories teach us about centering, belonging, entanglement, edgework, homemaking, and how to imagine the future. Rooted in wonder while never shying away from loss, Mother, Creature, Kin reaches toward a language of inclusive care learned from creatures living at the brink.