An acclaimed young nature writer's intimate exploration into the history and imperilled future of these neglected but crucial ecosystems.
Salt lakes are some of the world's most extraordinary ecosystems, but nearly all of them – from the Great Salt Lake to the Aral Sea – are drying up, a harbinger of dust storms, rising sea levels, and worsening human health. In this dazzling love letter to strange and delicate waters and a moving odyssey into her own identity, Caroline Tracey takes readers across the American West and to Mexico, Argentina, and Kazakhstan to document salt lakes, their loss, and the efforts underway to save them. She explores how the lakes have reflected the fast-changing natural world through Mormon diaries, Soviet realist novels, and Australian Aboriginal paintings. And she unravels the lakes' lessons for her own life as she finds queer love and a sense of home in an imperfect world. An unforgettable coming-of-age story and an exquisite work of nature writing, Salt Lakes: An Unnatural History is a moving call to fight for all that is fragile in our lives.
Caroline Tracey's work in English and Spanish has appeared in the New Yorker, New York Review of Books, and elsewhere. She holds a PhD in geography from the University of California, Berkeley, and lives in Tucson, Arizona.
"Salt Lakes is a perceptive, poetic ode to one of our planet's most vital, and most overlooked, ecosystems. Caroline Tracey plumbs law, science, and literature in a debut as gorgeous and vibrant as the lakes she loves."
– Ben Goldfarb, author of Crossings
"Salt Lakes is not just a book of nature writing, not just a memoir, but like the salt lakes themselves, something much more wondrous and precious. Caroline Tracey leads readers through her growing understanding of herself and the strange beauty of the ecosystems around her, and along the way reminds us of the abundance and possibilities inherent in queer lives and landscapes."
– Alejandra Oliva, author of Rivermouth
"In Salt Lakes, Caroline Tracey shows us the beauty, vitality, and necessity of landscapes both strange and familiar. This is nature writing as it should be."
– Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts