
With keen vision and sharp wit she introduces us to deserts, canyons, turquoise seas, and ancestral mountains, as well as to comedian plants, psychiatrist mules, and Persians who consider turquoise the equivalent of a bulletproof vest. From the Sierra Nevada, the Mojave Desert, the Yucatan Peninsula, and the Bahamas to her home ground on the high plateaus and in the deep canyons of the Southwest, we journey with Meloy through diverse habitats of supersensual light, through places of beauty and places of desecration. In this luminous mix of memoir, natural history, and eccentric adventure, Meloy uses turquoise-the color and the gem-as a metaphor for a way to make sense of the world from the clues of nature. It has been rightly said: Color is the first principle of Place. For artist-naturalist Ellen Meloy, who has spent most of her life in wild, remote places, an intoxication with light and color-sometimes subliminal, often fierce-has expressed itself as a profound attachment to landscape. Neurobiologists say that our sensitivity to color begins when we are infants. How our perceptions are our only internal map of the world, how there are places that claim you and places that warn you away. "Of all the things I wondered about on this land, I wondered the hardest about the seduction of certain geographies that feel like home-not by story or blood but merely by their forms and colors. How our perceptions are our only internal map of the.
