Will Byrnes's Reviews > The Age of Deer: Trouble and Kinship with our Wild Neighbors

The Age of Deer by Erika Howsare
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really liked it
bookshelves: animals, anthropology, ecology, environment, memoir, natural-history, nonfiction

…deer…occupy a middle zone between …extremes of domestication and wildness. Far from tame, they are nonetheless experts at living with people, and in many ways, they actually prefer to share habitat with us. All across North America, as in many other parts of the world, we exist in intimate proximity to deer.
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The FAA considers white-tailed deer more hazardous to U.S. civil aircraft than any other animal.
Many images might pop to mind when we think about deer. I am sorry to say that the first one in my tiny mind is the sad vision of road kill. The second is the sheer joy of spotting wild deer in woods, or yards, or, more grandly, in national parks, whether the white-tail native to my part of the world, the mule deer and caribou more prevalent in the west, and even moose. I cannot say I have seen reindeer in the wild, unfortunately. Many visits to the Bronx Zoo introduced me to a much wider range of cervids, the family to which deer belong, including the diminutive muntjacs.

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Erika Howsare - image from her site

Erika Howsare has had more of a connection to deer than, I expect, most of us. She grew up in western Pennsylvania in a family that hunted. In fact, the Monday after Thanksgiving is an unofficial holiday in our state, with most schools, and many businesses closed due to expected high absenteeism. This is one of many foci of interaction between deer and people.
I’d had an inkling, even before writing the book proposal, that deer were involved in all manner of controversies, contradictions, and human strivings. That was what got me interested in them. But I didn’t know too many specifics. When I started researching, one of the first things I did was to set up news alerts on deer and several other related terms.

Within a week, I had a rough outline of some of the major roles deer play in our world. They are victims; they are pests; they are something to hunt as well as something to study and protect. They are the targets of culling operations and the objects of sentimental love. They are trophies and intruders. It was all there in the news cycle.
- From the Lithub article
Thankfully, Howsare, a published poet, offers a lot more than the daily deer chyron.
I did start the book from a fairly cerebral place where I thought, “Oh yeah, great subject. Like, this will bring up all kinds of great questions, and I’ll be able to go down all these roads in terms of the research and make these points, and it’s gonna be a really great opportunity to dig into these intellectual questions.”
What I wasn’t expecting was how much it would change me as a person.
- from the Phoebe Journal interview
And a wondrous opportunity it proved. You will learn a lot about the human/deer connection, and a bit about deer behavior as well.

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White tailed deer - image from PennVet – University of Pennsylvania

One thing to consider is just how long deer and humans have been interacting. Pretty much as long as there have been people, judging by the content of ancient cave art. They appear in all cultures, and are a rich presence in mythology worldwide. As our first-hand experience of deer is usually liminal, many have come to see deer as ambassadors of the wild world, crossing from theirs to ours, and maybe offering a route away from the world of living humans. Of course, for many of us there is an UR deer image that has been burned into our brains. Really, can you name any other deer this side of Santa’s team?

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Bambi - image from Disney via KRCA.com

They are beautiful and offer us an image of wildland innocence. But for many they have become pestiferous. Consider having spent months planting and tending your beautiful back yard garden, only to wake one day to find that real-life Bambis and their kin have laid waste to all your work. There is also the carnage caused not just to deer but to people and their vehicles from collisions with deer. There are folks whose job it is to collect the bodies. Howsare spent time with one of them.

Deer have been a crucial source of food for people across the millennia, but also of a wide range of materials. Howsare gets trained in earth skills to find out how to make buckskin, and many other useful items formed from deer parts.

We usually think of reintroduction of wildlife having to do with trout, or other finned creatures. You may have heard of attempts to reintroduce predators, like wolves in Yellowstone. But the largest and most successful reintroduction in US history occurred in the early 20th century when deer, which had been driven near to extinction, were reintroduced in many parts of the nation.

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Sweet Tooth - image from Netflix via BBC

Ok, this was not at all included in the book but I kinda hoped it would gain at least a mention, as it does speak to the closeness of our species.

Factlets abound. Did you know that deer can suffer from a chronic, deadly disease that we usually associate with cattle, chronic wasting disease? Or that maybe the notion of adorning rulers with crowns was a way of imitating the stag rack? You will gain an appreciation for the use of deer-based imagery in the film Get Out. There are plenty more.

One of the main points to be gained is seeing how deer are actually quite adaptable, and have managed to carve out an ecological niche at the perimeters of human population.

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Moose - image rom Britannica

A survey course on cervid-sapiens connection makes for an entertaining, informative read on its own. But Howsare incorporates a personal journey into her narrative. Never a hunter, at least not one who shoots anything, she has enough personal connection to folks who do, relations, to want to gain a better understanding of the hunting culture and the rationales of those who kill deer. She looks at her own feelings about deer and hunting. Not all who hunt actually shoot. Hunting can be a group activity, with a diversity of roles, very reminiscent of our prehistoric ancestors. One very appealing element of this learning curve for Howsare was becoming more comfortable with being still, settling into a place and letting herself experience the environment, the moment, fully, a form of meditation almost.

She looks at some of the outrages associate with hunting as well. Like releasing or breeding deer in fenced areas to be killed by people fond of killing things, but not much interested in doing all the research and preparation that serious hunters undertake. Think Dick Cheney hunting quail.

My only gripe about the book is a petty one. I find that science/nature books always go down easier when the information is spiced with a bit of humor. No danger of that here. So, past my personal preferences, The Age of Deer is an easy thumbs up. You will learn a lot and gain a far greater understanding of the relationship between humans and cervids throughout history and our interactions today, finding yourself saying, whether aloud or internally, “I never knew that.”

In the Anthropocene, it seems that far too much of humanity has assumed the position of the prototypical you-know-what frozen in place as the headlights of global doom approach at increasing speed. Deer, at least, have an excuse for such behavior, as their woodland-creature-instinct, however misguided it might be on a paved road, is to become very still so an approaching predator might not see or hear them. Given their abundance on the planet, it is a strategy that has worked out well for them, despite the roadside carnage, as deer remain the last large wild animal in most places. The roaches and rats will not be alone after we are gone. Deer, icons of woodland beauty, are adaptable. They are survivors, and will be keeping them company.
If the American project was, in part, to make a pastoral landscape out of a wilderness, deer benefited from that project in a cultural sleight of hand. We thought of them as part of the wild, but we had misconceived them. Their secret was that they, like us—like squirrels, corn, apple trees, clover, ands sparrows—would flourish in our human garden.

Review posted - 03/22/24

Publication date – 01/20/24

I received a hardcover of The Age of Deer from Catapult in return for a fair review. Thanks, folks.



This review will soon be cross-posted on my site, Coot’s Reviews. Stop by and say Hi!

=============================EXTRA STUFF

Links to the author’s personal, FB, Instagram, and Twitter pages

Profile – from Catapult
ERIKA HOWSARE holds an MFA in literary arts from Brown University and has published two books of poetry. She also worked in local journalism for twenty years, covering culture and environmental issues. She teaches writing and contributes reviews and essays to various national outlets. A native of Pennsylvania, she lives in rural Virginia.

Interviews
-----Poets & Writers - Ten Questions for Erika Howsare by staff
-----Flyleaf Books - Erika Howsare presents THE AGE OF DEER -Howsare reads from the book then takes questions – the sound quality is poor
-----Phoebe Journal - Hungry Deer and Pissed off Gardeners: An Interview with Erika Howsare by Ashlen Renner

Items of Interest from the author
-----The Atlantic - An Incurable Disease Is Coming for Deer - an excerpt - but requires a subscription
-----Orion - Skin to Skin with a Deer - excerpt
-----Virginia Audio Collective - If You See a Deer - a four-episode companion podcast
-----Lithub - Erika Howsare on Finding Inspiration in Headlines

Items of Interest
-----Be vewy, vewy quiet. - Mister Fudd may be hunting a different species, but his approach applies to deer as well
My review of Stephen Graham Jones’s - The Only Good Indian - a wronged elk on the warpath
-----My review of Elizabeth Marshall Thomas’s - The Hidden Life of Deer: Lessons from the Natural World
-----Gutenberg - The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
March 18, 2024 – Finished Reading
March 20, 2024 – Shelved
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: animals
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: anthropology
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: ecology
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: environment
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: memoir
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: natural-history
March 20, 2024 – Shelved as: nonfiction

Comments Showing 1-11 of 11 (11 new)

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message 1: by Clif (new)

Clif Hostetler Deer thrive on civilization. I've heard that their population in the KC metro area is higher now than it was hundreds of years ago because of lack of predators and no hunting.


Will Byrnes Another possibility is that deer numbers had already been brought low by the increase in human predation that came with European colonization, so the increase was based on an artificially low base line. One of the points in the book is that we do not really know what a truly "normal" deer population is.


Christine I’m guessing you’re in the NYC area like I am. SI never had deer when I moved here during HS. The population exploded…I guess it helps that we also have a lot of green space. It really is a marvel when spotting one while hiking. I’ve come close to hitting one once but that one time was enough to scare me. I’ve come across quite a few carcasses….try telling 311 where it is and they’re clueless.

This will have to go on my ever growing TBR list…lol I’ll blame you for a portion of the list but this was a great review. Thanks for it.


Will Byrnes Thanks, Christine. I was in the NYC area for most of my life, but have been in Wilkes Barre, PA since 2017. As NYC is on the flyway, there is considerable opportunity to see a diversity of avian life, but, aside from the outer edges, where city meets 'burbs, not a lot of deer.


message 5: by Caroline (new)

Caroline Great review Will! Plus I learnt a new word - pestiferous (of course) - so well utilized by you.

I am not wholly unsympathetic to the idea of stewardship. I know that a herd of deer can overgraze an area - leading to many of them being poorly. It seems sensible under these circumstances to allow experienced hunters keep numbers at a healthy level. But "..... releasing or breeding deer in fenced areas to be killed by people fond of killing things," No, no and no again. That is totally yuk.

Anyway, great review. Thank you!


Will Byrnes Thanks, Caroline. My personal hunting experience is mostly confined to things with six legs.


message 7: by Barbara K. (new)

Barbara K. I grew up in one of those “Thanksgiving is for hunting deer” families, and they have always been in my life in one way or another. These days they are very present in the leafy suburbs where we live - a frustration from a gardening perspective but a joy to watch as they traverse the neighborhood and spend time in the small woodlot behind our house. They clearly have no fear of people here (though I’m glad I no longer have a dog who would run deer in the woods. He wouldn’t know what to do with himself here!


Christine We have a growing population of hawks and falcons. It’s great watching them soar. I need to find myself a book identifying different birds I’ve come across. It’s so stress reducing just seeing them ☺️


message 9: by Will (last edited Apr 06, 2024 01:05AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Will Byrnes There are many books, from Audubon and others, but there are also many online resources as well, not to mention apps one can tote around on a phone. I have Merlin on mine.


message 10: by Christine (new) - added it

Christine Oh great! Thanks for the suggestions Will.


message 11: by Will (new) - rated it 4 stars

Will Byrnes Christine wrote: "Oh great! Thanks for the suggestions Will."

My pleasure


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