"Mysterious and magical." âWall Street Journal
â[A] book everyone will be talking about... [A] real-life friendship that mirrors the one between Saint-ExupĂ©ryâs Little Prince and his fox, full of tenderness and understanding." âThe New York Times
âEntrancing.... Ravenâs gorgeous account of her bond with a fox while living in a remote cabin will open readersâ eyes to the ways humans connect to the natural world and vice versa. ... If thereâs one book you pick up this summer, make it this one.â âBethanne Patrick, Washington Post
âIn this quiet, charming memoir, Raven recounts her journey to accepting this unusual companion.... Throughout, Raven writes about her environment with wonder and reverence but never formalityâitâs the easy affection of someone whoâs long made family of the natural world.â âBuzzFeed News
âRavenâs extraordinary memoir is a love song to the animal who miraculously arrives in the front yard of her remote cabin every afternoon to be read passages from The Little Prince. A poetic, revelatory portrait of a biologistâs solitary sojourn.â âOprah Daily
Itâs a familiar story arc: human becomes best friends with a wild animal and life lessons are learned. Yet in biologist and former Glacier National Park ranger Catherine Ravenâs hands, the storyâof isolation and tender friendship with a wild foxâfeels new. ...Her memoir reminds us that connection to the natural world comes in many forms.â âTime Magazine
â[Ravenâs] reflections shine a spotlight on the path out of loneliness, reminding us all that nature itself will ensure none of us are ever truly alone.â âZibby Owens, Good Morning America
âA soulful and indelible exploration of an interspecies friendship.â âBooklist
âA heartfelt meditation on the power of nature and a touching homage to a beloved wild friend.â âKirkus
â[An] offbeat and charming memoir. .... Along with reverently describing her furry friendâwho had a âface so innocent that you would have concluded that he never stalked a bluebird, let alone dismembered oneââRaven writes poetically about the flora (âmy sun-worshipping tenantsâ) and fauna around her. Rich and meditative, Ravenâs musings on nature and solitude are delightful company.â âPublishers Weekly
A memoir about the friendship between a solitary woman and a fox, for readers of Wild and H Is for Hawk. Catherine Raven left home at fifteen, fleeing an abusive, disdainful father and an indifferent mother. More comfortable in nature than among people, she worked as a National Park ranger, eventually earning a PhD in biology. She built a house on an isolated plot of land in Montana, teaching remotely and leading field classes. One day, she realized that the mangy-looking fox who had been appearing on her property was now showing up every day at 4:15 p.m. She had never had a regular visitor before. How do you even talk to a fox? One day she brought out her camping chair, sat as close to him as she dared, and began reading to him from The Little Prince. Her scientific training had taught her not to anthropomorphize animals, but as she grew to know him, his personality revealed itselfâand he became her friend. But friends cannot always save each other from the uncontained forces of nature. Fox and I is a poignant and dramatic tale of friendship, transformation, and coping with inevitable lossâand of how that loss can become meaning. It is also the introduction of an original, imaginative, stunning literary voice.