Christopher Cokinos is the author or coeditor of several books, including The Fallen Sky: An Intimate History of Shooting Stars, Hope Is the Things with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds, and Beyond Earth’s Edge: The Poetry of Spaceflight. He is the winner of awards and fellowships from, among others, New American Press, the Whiting Foundation, the Rachel Carson Center in Munich, and the National Science Foundation. His poems, articles, and essays have appeared in such venues as Scientific American, High Country News, Astronomy, Discover.com, and the Los Angeles Times. Having taught literature, writing, and science communication for more than three decades at three universities, he again lives and writes in Utah. His website is www.christophercokinos.com.
"""Still as Bright is a mesmerizing masterpiece that instills a profound sense of wonder and respect for the Moon. Its blend of poetic storytelling and scientific insights ensures an unforgettable reading experience. Whether you are passionate about space exploration or our place in the universe or simply captivated by our Moon's allure, today and through the ages, this book deserves a place on your bookshelf."" -- <B>James R. Hansen, <I>New York Times</I> Best Selling Author of <I>First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong</I></B> ""It's rare for a book to turn science into lyricism, to weave between past and present seamlessly, and to transform personal history into a universal meditation. Still As Bright accomplishes all three, an even rarer feat. In this awe-inspiring exploration of what the Moon has meant to Earth and its people, Cokinos draws the two celestial bodies into philosophical, cultural, emotional, and scientific orbit around each other, mirroring in his text their mutual motion in the cosmos."" -- <B>Sarah Scoles, author of <I>The Are Already Here</I></B> “The moon is a strangely challenging subject, but Christopher Cokinos does a wonderful job revealing both the oldest and latest lunar news and providing insight into the swirl of controversial new activity. People will soon be back on the moon and Still As Bright provides a better grasp on the true significance of this. This is also a poetic narrative of moonlit fascination that is a delight to read.” * <B>Kim Stanley Robinson, author of <i>The Ministry for the Future </i>and <i>The High Sierra: A Love Story</i></B> * “Cokinos has a way of inviting us to enter new worlds while transporting us to thoughts we haven’t yet had. It’s action and meditation in balance: by the end, we know ourselves better than we did. Still as Bright is going to be remembered as a masterpiece of ecological and philosophical exploration, taking its place beside the works of Terry Tempest Williams and Barry Lopez, Robert McFarlane and Annie Dillard.” -- <B>Michael Paterniti, National Magazine Award Winner and author of <I>The Telling Room and Driving Mr. Albert</I></B> “Still as Bright showcases Cokinos’s peerless talent for braiding personal experience with epic scientific adventure—and in the process, conjures an alchemy of love, heartache, mystery, and wonder. This rumination on the Moon’s place in human affairs is filled with surprise and insight enough to fill the Sea of Rains."" -- <B>Earl Swift, best-selling author of <I>Chesapeake Requiem</I></B> Praise for Christopher Cokinos “Eloquent and moving...a charming narrative that is both personal and historically meticulous."" * <I> The Washington Post Book World</I> * ""In this hefty, industrious book, Cokinos retraces Peary’s steps, and those of other meteor 'obsessives,' in an idiosyncratic hunt of his own."" * <I>The New Yorker</I> * “Cokinos guides the reader along his search for the driving force behind the passions of meteorite scientists, collectors, and dealers that make the meteoritic community such a vibrant and contentious bunch. It is a journey well worth taking.” * <I>Science</I> * “Calling this a bird book would be like calling Moby Dick a fishing story."" * <I>The Baltimore Sun</I> *"