![]() Following the sudden death of her father, Macdonald adopts a goshawk and spends months training it-and grieving. ![]() In her memoir, H Is for Hawk (Grove, $16), Helen Macdonald offers a similarly lyrical reflection on life (and death) and grief and healing. The tradition of reflective, personal writing does not stop with Williams or Oliver. ![]() Though Oliver is most frequently recognized for her poetry, the essays in Upstream (Penguin Press, $26) offer celebratory meditations on work, art, nature and place-and the intersections of each. Mary Oliver, like Williams, is known for her reflections on nature and our place within it. ![]() Though the collection covers heavy topics and difficult subjects, it is ultimately a celebration of the world with its many flaws and quiet moments of beauty. The birds still remember what we have forgotten, that the world is meant to be celebrated." Terry Tempest Williams takes her own words to heart in When Women Were Birds (Picador, $17), a kind of personal-memoir-turned-essay-collection in which she explores the deeply personal (the loss of her mother, reflections on her Mormon upbringing, anecdotes from her marriage) and the universal (finding one's voice, especially as a woman). ![]() "Once upon a time, when women were birds, there was a simple understanding that to sing at dawn and to sing at dusk was to heal the world through joy. ![]()
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