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Ellen Meloy

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Name
  
Ellen Meloy

Role
  
Nature writer


Spouse
  
Mark Meloy (m. 1985)

Education
  
Goucher College

Ellen Meloy archivesltribcomimages2004110920041109utm

Died
  
November 4, 2004, Bluff, Utah, United States

Awards
  
Whiting Awards, Spur Award for Best Nonfiction Contemporary

Nominations
  
Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction, National Book Critics Circle Award for General Nonfiction

Books
  
The Anthropology of Turquo, Eating Stone, The last cheater's waltz, Raven's Exile

Ellen Meloy (June 21, 1946, Pasadena, California – November 4, 2004, Bluff, Utah) was an American nature writer.

Contents

Life

She was born Ellen Louise Ditzler in Pasadena, California. She graduated from Goucher College with a degree in art, and from the University of Montana with a master's degree in environmental studies. She married her husband Mark Meloy, a river ranger, in 1985. Her nephew is the musician and writer Colin Meloy and her niece is the writer Maile Meloy

An award has been named for her, and the fourth recipient is Amy Irvine.

Quotes

…in the desert there is everything and there is nothing. Stay curious. Know where you are—your biological address. Get to know your neighbors—plants, creatures, who lives there, who died there, who is blessed, cursed, what is absent or in danger or in need of your help. Pay attention to the weather, to what breaks your heart, to what lifts your heart. Write it down.

~E.M. November 2004

On the Colorado Plateau, with its considerable share of wildlands, a natural world more or less intact, the most exotic terrain may be the plateau's own history. During my recent journeys this history felt foreign and unnervingly off-the-Map, even as I lived in its heart. Gaze out from the mesa, and you will meet my duplicitous lover. You will see eternity, a desert that like no other place exudes the timelessness of nature as the final arbiter. Scrape off our century, and you will find its usurper, pressed into a nugget of inorganic matter, the single greatest threat to the continuity of life. The history inscribed itself on the Map's most alarming folios; ignoring it was no way to earn Home.

—Ellen Meloy, The Last Cheater's Waltz

Awards

  • 1997 Whiting Award
  • 2003 Pulitzer Prize nomination for The Anthropology of Turquoise Meditations on Landscape, Art & Spirit (2003)
  • 2007 John Burroughs Medal Award
  • Works

  • "GROUND ZERO", Salon, February, 24, 1999
  • Raven's Exile: A Season on the Green River. H. Holt. 1994. ISBN 978-0-8050-2497-5. 
  • The Last Cheater's Waltz: Beauty and Violence in the Desert Southwest. University of Arizona Press. 2001. ISBN 978-0-8165-2153-1. 
  • The anthropology of turquoise: meditations on landscape, art, and spirit. Pantheon Books. 2002. ISBN 978-0-375-40885-4. 
  • Eating Stone: Imagination and the Loss of the Wild. Pantheon Books. 2005. ISBN 978-0-375-42216-4. 
  • Christopher J. Hunter, Ellen Meloy (1991). Tom Palmer, ed. Better trout habitat: a guide to stream restoration and management. Island Press. ISBN 978-0-933280-77-9. CS1 maint: Uses authors parameter (link)
  • "Foreword". Sandstone seduction: rivers and lovers, canyons and friends. Big Earth Publishing. 2004. ISBN 978-1-55566-338-4. 
  • Anthologies

  • Bill McKibben, ed. (2008). American Earth: environmental writing since Thoreau. Literary Classics of the United States. ISBN 978-1-59853-020-9. 
  • Susan Wittig Albert, Susan Hanson, eds. (2007). "Think not of a Tectonic Plate but of a Sumptuous Feast". What wildness is this: women write about the Southwest. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71630-8. CS1 maint: Uses editors parameter (link)
  • William Kittredge, John Smart, eds. (1988). Montana spaces: essays and photographs in celebration of Montana. Photographer John Smart. Nick Lyons Books. ISBN 978-1-55821-000-4. CS1 maint: Uses editors parameter (link)
  • References

    Ellen Meloy Wikipedia


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