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How to Catch a Mole

Wisdom from a Life Lived in Nature

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Kneeling in a muddy field, clutching something soft and blue-black, Marc Hamer vows he will stop trapping moles—forever. In this earnest, understated, and sublime work of nonfiction literature, the molecatcher shares what led him to this strange career: from sleeping among hedges as a homeless teen, to toiling on the railway, to weeding windswept gardens in Wales.Hamer infuses his wanderings with radiant poetry and stark, simple observations on nature’s oft-ignored details. He also reveals how to catch a mole—a craft long kept secret by its masters—and burrows into the unusual lives of his muses.Moles, we learn, are colorblind. Their blood holds unusual amounts of carbon dioxide. Their vast tunnel networks are intricate and deceptive. And, like Hamer, they work alone.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 13, 2019
      This informative and effortlessly readable work from poet Hamer is at once an educational primer on the titular species, and a sensitive look at his own life in the unlikely profession of molecatching. Long employed by homeowners and farmers in Llandaff, Wales, to help them eradicate animals generally regarded as pests, Hamer explains that he stopped after becoming “tired of hunting, trapping and killing.” However, he also shares a sense of gratitude for “a life that encourages a passion for nature, for its functional beauty and its violent brutal energy—even for its decay.” His writing conveys this passion with closely observed descriptions, such as of how moles dig tunnels, helped by their “dark, blue-black hair... soft and velvety brushes just as easily backwards, forwards and sideways.” Hamer also peppers the narrative with personal history, referencing experiences with homelessness, when like a mole he “perfected hiding skills and went underground,” surviving outdoors and avoiding contact with other people. Ultimately a reflection on humanity’s fraught but sustaining relationship with nature and on life’s “intertwining rhythmic cycles that thump along,” Hamer’s heartfelt work should have far wider appeal than its niche subject might suggest. With b/w illustrations.

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  • English

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