For thousands of years, humans and grazing animals moved with the seasons in search of pasture. On the flanks of the Pirin Mountains, the last true pastoralists continue this ancient practice as a way of life. Here, the paths are formed by dogs, shepherds, horses and sheep, moving together. Few people survive a whole summer in the alpine highlands, where human lives are as precarious as the lives of animals they care for – or who care for them. In Anima, Kapka Kassabova lives with one of these communities, experiencing the intensity, brutality, beauty and isolation of their existence over one summer. She witnesses the epic, orchestrated activity of transhumance – the seasonal movement of vast herds of sheep, along with shepherds and dogs. As she becomes attuned to the sacrifices inherent in this work and the rich histories that shaped this Balkan region, Kassabova finds herself drawn deeper into the tangled relationships at the heart of the small community. Anima is an extraordinary portrayal of pastoral life, where humans and animals exist in profound interdependence. Kassabova conjures the spirit of this remarkable place with intimacy and empathy, and helps us imagine how we might all begin to heal our broken relationship with the natural world.
A book that mesmerises with its sense of adventure and epic sweep, this is creative nonfiction at its best. * Guardian * A haunting, beautiful book from what feels a darkly enchanted land. Kassabova is an extraordinary writer who slips into the skin of a place. Fiercely intelligent, scalpel-sharp, at once romantic and toughly pragmatic: Anima will live with me for a long time -- Cal Flyn, author of ISLANDS OF ABANDONMENT Anima is a masterwork and a profound and important book. Kassabova is writing about how we forgot the land and our animals and banished many tribes. In doing so, we lost our soul. Anima is a treasure of nature writing and people writing, a classic in the making for our times -- Monique Roffey, author of THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH [Kassabova is] iron-hard and courageous, both on the page and in life... Roaming across the high pastures, Kassabova sees all our lives with clarity * Spectator * Anima is what happens when an extraordinary writer and dauntless explorer discovers a wild and ancient way of life still, somehow, surviving in Europe's remotest wilderness. This is a beautiful book of passion and adventure. It asks: who are we, what have we done and how shall we live? Kapka Kassabova stops at nothing, including risking her life, on her quest to see deeply, live fully, to learn, and teach, constantly. She is simply sublime -- Horatio Clare, author of HEAVY LIGHT Kapka Kassabova’s new book is an extraordinary work of exploration, both inner and outer. It should be required reading for everyone thinking about our human environment: which is to say, all of us. -- Fiona Sampson * The Tablet * The poet laureate of the margins... "Must I squeeze my experiences into such a small space when they are so much larger?" This question suffuses Kassabova's incandescent book, and she poses it relentlessly, in spare, hard prose - prose worthy of the rock and the raven -- Charles Foster * Times Literary Supplement * Kapka Kassabova has written a series of fascinating, idiosyncratic, often poetic non-fiction books which deal with issues of place, culture and identity… Her goal is to find some solutions to mankind’s broken relationship with nature. That’s a marker of her ambition as a writer. And her writing is worthy of it * Herald * At once a dirge and a praise song for pastoralism... At turns muscular, tender, and sublime, this book is one of the finest testimonies for saving the earth, and our humanity, that I've ever read. It is unforgettable -- Imani Perry, author of SOUTH TO AMERICA In prose as fierce and beautiful as the landscapes and lifeways it describes, Anima documents the vanishing connection between people, dogs, sheep and wildlife that once tied together much of the ancient world. This book is at once a testament and a mending and a blessing, full of glory and sorrow, and characters both human and animal who you will never forget. -- Sy Montgomery, author of SECRETS OF THE OCTOPUS This is a lyrical, if melancholy, book that captures an ancient community in a moment of flux * New Statesman * Fascinating... At its heart, this is an emotional story about the bonds between humans, animals, and the land * Kirkus Reviews, starred review * Kassabova possesses a gift that’s bestowed on only the best of travel writers: an ability to zero in on characters who illuminate the condition of a place in time * New York Times * She had me under her spell from page one * Guardian, praise for Elixir * Dark and mysterious and beautiful * Financial Times, praise for Elixir * Uplifting and beautifully written. * Spectator, praise for Elixir * Aromatic, lyrical, disturbing – and very, very fine * Sunday Times, praise for Border * Border brilliantly reveals the effects of a millennium of kaleidoscopic shifting. Thoughtful and impressive * Observer * The language of Kapka’s books is captivating, and they are imbued with her insightful perception into the psychology of humans, animals, plants and landscapes * Scotsman * My generation’s great travel writer… [Anima is] another triumph in her Bulgarian quartet -- Horatio Clare * Week *
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