For Robert Leonard Reid, protecting wilderness is a literary act.
The Carson City, Nev.-based writer has spent 40 years roving Western landscapes in an effort to preserve them, primarily through his words. Reidโs latest work, Because It Is So Beautiful: Unraveling the Mystique of the American West, displays an almost claustral curiosity: An exploratory spirit envelops and propels him across the Arctic, the Sierras, the Rockies, the sacred spaces of Native America and all the toeholds and crags in between, from the High Plains of eastern New Mexico to the Bugaboos in British Columbia.
Reid writes with the flair of daredevil naturalist Craig Childs and the philosophical quotient of nature essayist Edward Hoagland. The book functions like an atlas; each essay is a wayfinding tool, navigating the reader toward โthe mystique of the American Westโโsomething that, despite the bookโs subtitle, he seeks not to unravel, but preserve: โA journey into the Sierra, even today, is a journey into ambiguity and mystery โฆ any account of a wilderness journey that omits the ambiguity โฆ is bound to be false.โ Mystique is his muse in these essays, which blend wilderness and adventure writing, environmental reportage, and historical and literary analysis. Drawing on three earlier books and previously unpublished material, this career-spanning collection was a finalist for the 2018 PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay.
A central question unifies the book: How do you truly know a place? Topophiliaโloving a particular landscape and identifying with it deeplyโmight be innate in each of us, but it is not necessarily accessible to us. It is for Reid, however. A formative experience with environmental writer Barry Lopez in 1979 fired Reidโs literary intuitions. A mountain climber and would-be writer, Reid attended a wilderness-preservation conference that Lopez keynoted. His speech struck Reid like a bolt from the sky. Lopez argued that wilderness activists needed to tell their legislators โthat a certain river or butterfly or mountain โฆ must be saved, not because of its economic (or) recreational or historical or scientific value, but because it is so beautiful.โ Reidโs future as a writer flashed into focus. Aesthetic value alone can save a landscape, but not unless it has a voice.
Reid builds that voice through sentences that construct landscapes and court curiosity, as his lexicon shifts with the terrain. His diction bewitches even the sleepiest of readers: J. Robert Oppenheimer is a โHeldentenor in cowboy bootsโ; the scientists at Los Alamos, those โKyries of Trinity,โ are โhosannas.โ Reid is a craftsman: โWriters who hope to reveal the essential matter of their subjects must have the patience, the facility, and, not least of all, the good luck to discover the proper light.โ
Reid is keen on New Mexico, whose โwide skies and yawning spacesโ remind him of the Judeo-Christian tradition of โseeking God in big empty country.โ Such places attract people โdrawn to grand vistas and soul-searching ruminationsโโsuch as Oppenheimer. Reid understands the contradictory forces at play in sacred spaces. In Los Alamos, โphysics and engineering became prayers and incantations,โ as if the magnitude of scientific discovery was a manifestation of the divine itself. A pilgrimage to a back-to-the-landerโs remote cabin in Alaskaโs Brooks Rangeโโ80 miles north of the Arctic Circle, 50 miles from the nearest neighbor, 200 miles from the nearest roadโโdovetails with a story about the elusive Porcupine caribou herd, which migrates annually to its calving grounds in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Reid tracks down the caribou right as they give birth, unraveling a mystical ecological process that had previously eluded him.
Whether one agrees that awe and beauty trump economics might be beside the point for Reid. His writings are about the larger point: the courage it takes to pursue oneโs ultimate aim, or telos. โTo save a wilderness, or to be a writer or a cab driver or a homemakerโto live oneโs lifeโone must reach deep into oneโs heart and find what is there, then speak it plainly and without shame.โ There is an evolutionary quality to the way his ideas mutate and build in the book, with each successive essay refining his lens on the West. This makes sense. You canโt capture mystique; it continually enchants us and then slips away. The more Reid interfaces with itโthe more peaks and passes he pursuesโthe more his essays (and he) unfold.
Eric Siegel, a poet and writer, is a field instructor for the Wild Rockies Field Institute in Montana, and teaches Environmental Humanities at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colo. This piece originally appeared in High Country News.
Because It Is So Beautiful: Unraveling the Mystique of the American West
By Robert Leonard Reid
Counterpoint
320 pages, $16.95

To Eric Siegel… Eric, thank you for your kind and generous review of “Because It Is So Beautiful,” which I have just discovered and which I shall treasure. What can I say…you got it. I keep a quote from Henry James close to my desk: “We work in the dark. We do what we can. We give what we have. Our doubt is our passion and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art.” Impossibly old-fashioned but, in these troubled time, so up-to-date.
It’s heart-warming to find a kindred spirit. If you ever make it to northern Nevada (I’m in Carson City), let me know.