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As a boy, Hohn had a religious devotion to the natural world around him. He memorized听the names of butterflies and spent听full days wandering the hillside with his听net or searching for creatures in tide pools.
As a boy, Hohn had a religious devotion to the natural world around him. He memorized听the names of butterflies and spent听full days wandering the hillside with his听net or searching for creatures in tide pools. (Photo: csterken/iStock)

‘The Inner Coast’ Explores Our Vulnerability to Nature

In the spirit of Thoreau and Dillard, Donovan Hohn considers the joyous and brutal aspects of the natural world

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As a boy, Hohn had a religious devotion to the natural world around him. He memorized听the names of butterflies and spent听full days wandering the hillside with his听net or searching for creatures in tide pools.
(Photo: csterken/iStock)

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In 1846, Henry David Thoreau ascended Maine鈥檚 惭辞耻苍迟听碍补迟补丑诲颈苍and shouted, in a fit of exuberance, 鈥淲ho are we? Where are we?鈥澨

Author Donovan Hohn, in his new collection of essays,听,writes that, for Thoreau,听those two questions are inseparable.听We can鈥檛 truly know ourselves without knowing the world around us, and vice versa.听

These interlocked听questions, which animate much of Thoreau鈥檚 work, echo throughout The Inner Coast, Hohn鈥檚 second book of nonfiction.听His听method in these essays is to look outward and then inward, and听hisconclusion is that we鈥檙e mistaken when we see ourselves as separate from nature. When I called Hohn at his home in Ann Arbor, Michigan, he reflected on the human tendency听鈥渢o pretend that we aren鈥檛, in some extremely vulnerable and permeable way, profoundly connected to the natural world.鈥 Hohn, who writes in a voice reminiscent of Annie Dillard or John McPhee, returns to this subject again and again听as he dives deep into topics ranging from the forgotten thrill of piloting an ice canoe to the long-standing cultural significance of mammoths.

A former editor at Harpers and GQ,Hohnnow teaches听creative writing at Wayne State University in Detroit. In one piece, he describes a听kind of听cartography听project听he assigns to his students that听asks them to map both physical and emotional space. Like explorers venturing into an unknown land, the students听walk Detroit and take detailed notes on what they see. 鈥淔rom those notes they are to听re-create their walks for readers, the sights and sounds, but also their own reaction to the sights and sounds, their unbidden memories and thoughts,鈥 he writes. By exploring where they are, the students are expected to discover something about who they are.听

Like his students, Hohn traverses local geographies and comes to see familiar places with fresh eyes. In a far-reaching essay called 鈥淲atermarks,鈥 he explores the way water moves through the world, especially in his home state of Michigan, drawing on insights from philosophy and literature. 鈥淲henever I visit a river, I have the urge to follow it,鈥 he writes. Part of what motivates Hohn鈥檚 search is the notion that water, perhaps the fundamental element of life,听has become something we take for granted. We can turn a valve when we need it, but otherwise we don鈥檛 think much about it. 鈥淟iving in the age of indoor plumbing is a bit like living beside a stream whose headwaters and mouth are distant rumors,鈥 he writes. Though most of this country was initially navigated by waterways, Hohn notes, 鈥渋n the 21st听century, it鈥檚 not easy to follow the water.鈥 Nonetheless, we find him听following听rivers and canals all over the Midwest, ultimately plunging into the depths of Lake Michigan with a team of commercial divers searching for a lost shipwreck. He joined the divers, he writes, 鈥渂ecause I鈥檇 imagined that descending the water column would be like time travel, like flippering into the past, as if fathoms were centuries.鈥 He is diving into physical space, yes, but he鈥檚 hoping to find something else, too.听

鈥淭his may be my oldest preoccupation,鈥 Hohn听told me,听鈥渢he relationship between memory and place.鈥

While Hohn offers personal reflections throughout the book, his focus never strays far from the subject at hand. In听鈥淔alling,鈥澨齢owever, he turns the magnifying glass on himself, beautifully describing听his childhood years living on Mount Davidson in听San Francisco. 鈥淭his may be my oldest preoccupation,鈥 he told me 鈥渢he relationship between memory and place.鈥 As a boy, Hohn had a religious devotion to the natural world around him. He memorized听the names of butterflies and spent听full days wandering the hillside with his听net or searching for creatures in tide pools. But these听experiences were听interwoven inextricably with his parents鈥 troubled relationship, his mother鈥檚 bouts of depression, his brother鈥檚 acting out, and a tragic accident that left Hohn himself in a body cast. The reader gets the sense that, instead of serving听as merely the backdrop, the landscape of Hohn鈥檚 childhood home is a character as real and prominent as any of the humans in the story. Compared with听family, he writes, 鈥渢rees make few demands, and you can hear whatever your heart desires in the lyrical soughing of their branches.鈥 Nature was听an ally听and a source of refuge and comfort.听

Of course, humans don鈥檛 always treat the natural world as an ally鈥攚hen we pollute and destroy it, the effects can be brutal.听In 鈥淭he Zealot,鈥 an essay听on the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, Hohn follows Marc Edwards, a civil and environmental engineer at Virginia Tech University, whose research into contaminated听drinking water across听the U.S. has turned him from a dispassionate scientific observer into a kind of activist. This is a tension familiar to medical professionals amid our current pandemic听and climate scientists whose dire warnings about a warming planet seem to fall on deaf ears. Edwards鈥檚 role in Flint was complicated: residents welcomed him as someone who could bring attention to their cause, but when his tests said the water was once again safe to drink, many who had grown rightfully suspicious of the water weren鈥檛 ready to accept his findings. Others criticized him for seeking the spotlight instead of standing behind city听residents, who, critics thought, should have been the focus. In this essay, Hohn demonstrates how humans鈥 vulnerability in the natural world is almost always felt most acutely by marginalized communities, and the tension he听illustrates is onewe鈥檒l continue to grapple听with as听events like climate change exacerbate existing inequalities.听听

For Hohn, 鈥渁t a time of bewildering and accelerating changes to habitats and geographies,鈥 Thoreau鈥檚 questions鈥擶ho are we? Where are we?鈥斺渃ontinue to invite new answers.鈥 And because those changes have only further accelerated听in the months听since The Inner Coast went to print, the reader will discover听answers that Hohn himself couldn鈥檛 have foreseen听while听writing these essays.听

The coronavirus, too, is of the natural world. Like us, it鈥檚 naturally occurring听and composed of genetic code. Hohn told me that one unanticipated effect of the virus might be to 鈥渄isillusion some of us who have mostly joyous experiences with the natural world.鈥 We may see nature as something beautiful to escape to鈥攂ut听also something brutal that can upend our lives at a moment鈥檚 notice.听

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