THE HIDDEN LIFE OF DEER

The insightful book

The insightful book

In her 1993 best seller, “The Hidden Life of Dogs,” Elizabeth Marshall Thomas had the wit - and the commercial good sense - to boil her observations down to a six-word equation. “What do dogs want?” she asked. Her obvious but resonant answer was simply: “Each other.”

In her new book, “The Hidden Life of Deer,” Ms. Thomas takes on a more skittish and elusive subject. Deer don’t want to be around humans; they are hard to tell apart; they resist interpretation. What do deer want? The answer will not be a two-worder.

Ms. Thomas lives in rural New Hampshire, and she began purposefully observing deer a few winters ago, after a season in which the trees in the Northeast produced a small acorn crop, and deer were starving. She began to leave out corn for them, against the strictures of the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department, which warned that feeding led to overpopulation and aggression, and drew deer dangerously away from their winter shelters.

At first Ms. Thomas left a little corn, then quite a lot, “50 to 75 pounds a day or about 2 pounds per deer at their maximum number.” Why, against all advice, did she feed them? “Because they were cold and hungry,” she explains, “because they hadn’t found enough to eat in the fall, because each had just one life.” Ms. Thomas’s tenderhearted arguments will strike some as being tender-headed. Deer have become a nuisance in the Northeast. They spread the ticks that carry Lyme disease. They decimate gardens. They cause more human deaths - thanks to the cars that plow sickeningly into them - than any other animal.

Ms. Thomas was driven to write “The Hidden Life of Deer” partly because of her disgust with much of what passes for literature about deer. “I often felt I was eavesdropping on love letters between game managers and hunters,” she writes.

No matter how opposed to deer feeding some people may be, no one has ever suggested that extra food in winter could result in a death toll of such magnitude.”

“The Hidden Life of Deer” is written in simple, homely sentences that occasionally give off a distracting whiff of New Age potpourri. When a car hits a bear near her house, she prevents a cop and later a hunter from tracking and killing the injured animal. A friend of Mr. Thomas’s defends her: “She doesn’t drink.

Ms. Thomas does not have much patience, either, with gardeners who complain about deer destroying their expensive plantings. “In my cosmology, indigenous wild deer are more important than exotic ornamental shrubs,” she writes.

You could have the book HERE

You could have the book HERE

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