The evocative title...reflects something of the nature of Mr. Hohn's writing, the fertile ground on which his outward explorations meet up with his natural tendency toward intellectual reflection and interiority.--Heather McAlpin "Wall Street Journal"
A collection of perceptive essays...[Hohn] has a charming attraction to quixotic characters.--Kevin Canfield "San Francisco Chronicle"
Donovan Hohn offers with The Inner Coast a humane view of a world that, as Ernest Hemingway said, is a fine place worth fighting for. And well worth reading about, too.--Gregory McNamee "Los Angeles Review of Books"
[The essays] are connected by Hohn's passion, his intelligence and the evocative style of his prose...Fascinating.--Keith Taylor "Michigan Quarterly Review"
Engaging, thoughtful, and marked by [Hohn's] sparkling wit and boundless curiosity...A title to treasure.-- "Booklist (starred review)"
There are echoes of Barry Lopez here, but Hohn's voice--reflective, trenchant, often eloquent--seems all his own...Settle in and savor a keen mind with a laudable moral compass.-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"
With his close sense of connection to nature and knack for quietly moving prose, Hohn reveals himself to be a valuable new name in narrative nonfiction.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Donovan Hohn has a genius for noticing the previously unnoticed and for writing about our environments with careful precision and a patient observer's love of detail. He is a kind of contemporary archeologist, writing about what surrounds us, and he does so with uncommon grace and quiet eloquence. This is a wonderful book.--Charles Baxter
Donovan Hohn's prose is as immaculate and quotable as that of any writer of his generation. And while you always sense his outrage about ecological calamity, and never doubt his moral engagement, his advocacy never feels hectoring. There's no writer living or dead I would rather read on the reliably distressing topic of environmentalism than Donovan Hohn.--Tom Bissell
I've seldom encountered a writer with a better understanding of both the literary and the journalistic ways and means of telling a true story. Donovan Hohn thinks clearly; he writes with eloquence and force.--Lewis H. Lapham
Donovan Hohn has a diviner's capacity to tap into the source and the flow of a story, whether the 'story' is narrative or argumentative. His attention to the appearances of things--the false; the true--tunes the reader's alert-addled animal brain to the meaningful, and the terrible. As the Earth begins to resist us, to remind us that how we're living will be our undoing, Hohn's work is that sad, happy thing, glinting in the sand: evidence of what a human mind could do, and what a human heart could yield.--Wyatt Mason
One of our very best contemporary essayists.--Rivka Galchen