A SLENDER THREAD, 1997
"Both a sensuous road map through depression, despair and loss of self,
and a homage to the wonder, multiplicity and rejuvenating power of nature,
this new book from the author of A Natural History of the Senses is,
quite simply, wonderful.
.....Ackerman leads the reader on a respectful, deeply emotional,
life-affirming journey."
--Publishers Weekly
"This is more than just a marvelous book. 'A Slender Thread' is one of
those rare moments in publishing: when a compelling subject is treated
with sensitivity, wisdom and skill by an author who seems born to write
about it."
--The Grand Rapids Press
"Her most important book since A Natural History of the Senses..Ackerman's
gifts are prodigious: supple prose, an eye for detail, original
metaphor, a generosity of self. But the overriding triumph of this book
is how through anecdote and rumination, she takes the pejorative sting out
of depression and suicide...A Slender Thread is an absorbing, memorable
and engaging book."
-- The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Ackerman, whose poetic sensibility shone so brightly in A Natural
History of the Senses (1990), here brilliantly captures the intimacy and
intensity of her work...In
A Slender Thread, Ackerman stands at the edge of a precipice with each
troubled caller and comes away with a deeper understanding and appreciation
for life. This sensitive, sharply observing book will convince readers
that indeed there is, as she puts it, "hope at the heart of crisis."
-- People Magazine
"Alive with Diane Ackerman's brilliance and poetry, A Slender Thread
represents her usual best self: Her fans will not be disappointed and
readers new to her work will marvel. She is one of my favorite writers of
all time."
--Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
"Poet and naturalist Ackerman writes with profound tenderness and wonder
about the world, whether she's describing an alligator or a
hummingbird....Her intuitive grasp of the lives of animals has lead her to
write, in her most personal, emotional, and moving book yet, about
people as a "renegade species" determined to combat blind instinct,
achieve compassion, and find joy....In a narrative lush with her signature
gift for metaphor and delight in the senses, and taut with the drama of
her often frightening negotiations with people in the throes of every
imaginable form of crisis, Ackerman illuminates the bewildering workings
of the resilient human psyche. Extraordinarily knowledgeable and keenly
attuned to the dictates of evolution, she searches for the source of our
persistent loneliness and destructive reactions, weaving bits of her own
life into the stories of others....Ackerman is beyond category; an aeolian
harp singing the myriad songs of life, she helps us all focus on the
miraculous."
-- Donna Seaman, Booklist
"A writer who inspires devotion in her readers, Diane Ackerman comes
across in her books as a thoroughly nice person-- a mensch with a large,
ranging intellect...Readers will come away from A Slender Thread with a
good deal of respect for Diane Ackerman and her fellow volunteer
counselors-- and for community."
--The New York Times Book Review
"From Ackerman come these graceful, canny reflections on her hours spent
fielding calls at a suicide prevention center....{Her} voracious
imagination and curiosity find her making forays into biochemistry and the
artistic temperament, the weather and Walt Whitman, bicycling and skiing,
bringing them all to bear on her shifts at the crisis center. And it is
not surprising that, as a writer of luminous essays on natural history,
she is able to convincingly free-associate between the emotional geography
of animals (a group of squirrels she is studying for a project) and
humans, and compare her telephone work to the long distance communication
of whales, wolves, and birds.
One could do a lot worse than to find Ackerman at the end of the line
when feeling those desperately slippery moments of despair, the rush into
the unknown."
-- Kirkus Reviews
"A Slender Thread is a fascinating human encounter: with troubled people
at a crisis center, with the world of nature, and with the author
herself. Magically, Diane Ackerman manages to make poetry and reportage
from all three in this, her most important book."
-- Herbert Mitgang
"A Slender Thread is that rare book that understands both despair and hope,
the urgency of speech as well as the importance of silence. Ackerman has
provided a lifeline to more readers than she will ever know."
-- Newsday
"Ackerman writes brilliantly, her descriptions are charming, her keen
observations are both original and scientifically astute."
-- San Francisco Examiner
"In The Rarest of the Rare: Vanishing Animals, Timeless Worlds (1995),
she confides, "At thirteen I desperately wanted to be what I then thought
was called an adventuress." It took her years, she explains with quiet
amusement, to understand that what she meant was that she aspired to be
"some sort of naturalist/poet who patrolled the wilds of the world and the
jungle of ourselves with snares made of sentences." It was an original and
ambitious aspiration she has fulfilled with extraordinary verve,
intelligence, devotion and generosity of outlook and spirit in the course
of her 12 innovative and revelatory books....but never as overtly and
emotionally as in her newest, and most personal book....If one had to
describe the theme of this manifold book in a single word, it would be
compassion. Again and again Ackerman turns from the drama of the hot-line
calls to meditative and illuminating discussions of the paradoxes of human
nature."
-- The Chicago Tribune
"Ackerman is a profound and generous observer of the world around her. All
the blues can be swept away by her vibrant prose."
-- Entertainment Weekly
"This is a great, passionate, rivetting, gut-wrenching, beautifully
written book. Anyone who has enjoyed Diane Ackerman's pevious writing will
treasure this new volume even more."
-- Jared Diamond (Professor of
Physiology at UCLA
Medical School, author
of The Third Chimpanzee)
"this book contains many of her enthusiasms, amplified to full volume and
celebrated...the exuberance is set against the darker emotional landscape
Ackerman encounters each time she picks up the phone at her local Suicide
Prevention and Crisis Service. Counselling the desperate, she
concentrates all her senses through that tenuous telephone wire...less has
never been more."
--The New Yorker
"Ackerman is best known for working with animals, not plumbing the dank,
dark emotional depths of humans. So, on the surface, anyway, this does
not seem a likely match. The truth, though, is that the pairing couldn't
be more perfect. The years she spent observing nature stand her in good
stead here...She is exceptionally sensitive to and understanding of the
needs of the people who call...a brilliant writer who brings to her prose a
poet's sensibilites."
--Detroit News and Free Press