Esther Woolfson grew up in Glasgow and studied Chinese at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Edinburgh University. She has been the recipient of a Scottish Arts Council Travel Grant and a Writer's Bursary. Her first book was Corvus: A Life with Birds, and her second, Field Notes from a Hidden City, was shortlisted for the 2014 Thwaites Wainwright Prize for Nature and Travel Writing. She lives in Aberdeen.
"For all the talk of an ""animal turn,"" discussions of animals have today become so filled with jargon and political rhetoric that the creatures themselves often seem reduced to little more than rhetorical tropes. Between Light and Storm by Esther Woolfson is a book that can put the animals back in Animal Studies. The discussions in it are not only beautifully written and rich in historical detail but also filtered through personal reflection and experience. I know of no better introduction to the study of human-animal relations -- Boria Sax, author of * Avian Illuminations: A Cultural History of Birds * Genial, readable, warm-hearted and on nature's side -- Richard Mabey Woolfson specialises in [...] demonstrating how little most people understand about creatures they think ordinary... her writing flows beautifully -- Diana Athill A powerful, poignant, and urgently important reflection on our relations with the non-human world. Immaculately researched and compulsively readable -- Charles Foster, author of * Being a Beast * We live in a time in which our disrespect for nature is coming back to bite us. Timely and wide-ranging, Esther Woolfson's book offers sensitive reflections on how we relate to the animals around us as well as the animal within -- Frans de Waal Elegiac, haunting and piercingly intelligent, Esther Woolfson's exploration of our relationship with other species is sometimes painful to read but her articulacy and lightness of touch, and her own beautifully observed experiences, are a joy. A profoundly moving and important book -- Isabella Tree This is nature writing in the foraging and fossicking mode, reminiscent of Kathleen Jamie and Barry Lopez. Woolfson ranges widely across disciplines and through time; discursive, informative and always ready to explore a promising byway. She draws on a dizzying array of sources * New Internationalist * Between Light and Storm brings together a wealth of literature about humans and other animals... At every turn, Woolfson has an astute remark, whether from Tolstoy or JD Salinger * Financial Times * Spellbinding... Read and be caught * New Statesman *"