An awe-inspiring exploration of the sounds of the living Earth, and the joys and threats of human music, language and noise. ' Sounds Wild and Broken is a symphony, filled with the music of life . fascinating, heartbreaking, and beautifully written.' ELIZABETH KOLBERT , author of The Sixth Extinction 'Haskell shows us -- no, lets us hear -- that we are resonant animals in a thrillingly resonant universe . Superb.' CHARLES FOSTER , author of Being a Beast We live on a planet alive with song, music, and speech. David George Haskell explores how these wonders came to be. In rainforests shimmering with insect sounds and swamps pulsing with frog calls we learn about evolution's creative powers.
From birds in the Rocky Mountains and on the streets of Paris, we discover how animals learn their songs and adapt to new environments. Below the waves, we hear our kinship to beings as different as snapping shrimp, toadfish, and whales. In the startlingly divergent sonic vibes of the animals of different continents, we experience the legacies of plate tectonics, the deep history of animals and their movements around the world, and the quirks of aesthetic evolution. Starting with the origins of animal song and traversing the whole arc of Earth's history, Haskell illuminates and celebrates the emergence of the varied sounds of our world. In mammoth ivory flutes from Paleolithic caves, violins in modern concert halls, and electronic music in earbuds, we learn that human music and language belong within this story of ecology and evolution. Yet we are also destroyers, now silencing or smothering many of the sounds of the living Earth. Haskell takes us to threatened forests, noise-filled oceans, and loud city streets to show that sonic crises are not mere losses of sensory ornament. Sound is a generative force, and so the erasure of sonic diversity makes the world less creative, less beautiful.
Sounds Wild and Broken is an invitation to listen, wonder, act Haskell's writing is natural history, in every sense of the phrase, at its very best.' RICHARD POWERS , author The Overstory and Bewilderment (on The Forest Unseen ) 'Haskell thinks like a biologist, writes like a poet, and gives the natural world the kind of open-minded attention one expects from a Zen monk rather than a hypothesis-driven scientist.' NEW YORK TIMES (on The Songs of Trees ).