Growing up in the East Bay as the son of an astrophysicist and a psychologist, Obi Kaufmann spent most of his high school practicing calculus and breaking away on weekends to scramble around Mount Diablo and map its creeks, oak forests, and sage mazes. Into adulthood, he would regularly journey into the mountains, spending more summer nights without a roof than with one. He is the author of The California Field Atlas (2017, #1 San Francisco Chronicle Best Seller), The State of Water: Understanding California’s Most Precious Natural Resource (2019), and The Forests of California: A California Field Atlas (2020), all published by Heyday. When he is not backpacking, you can find the painter-poet at home in the East Bay, posting trail paintings at his handle @coyotethunder on Instagram. His website is coyoteandthunder.com.
I think it is safe to say that when one pores over the nearly 650-page Coasts of California- filled with vivid watercolor illustrations of flora and fauna and exquisite vistas and scenes, in addition to hand-colored maps of everything from coastal wildflower blooms to amphibian habitats to oceanic chlorophyll concentrations combined with painstakingly researched facts and histories-Kaufmann's knowledge of and respect for these myriad forms of life cannot help but spark one's own spirit of inquiry and adventure. -Red Canary The Coasts of California by Obi Kaufmann is an amazing achievement in both art and science. It is brimming with expressive yet accurate watercolors of animals, maps, landscapes, and concepts, annotated by elegant calligraphy and typography. -Pacific Horticulture Much more than a survey of tourist spots Coasts is a full immersion into the astonishingly varied natural worlds that hug California's shoreline. Everyone in the state should have this gorgeous book on their bookshelf. -CBS San Francisco Kaufmann's gaze easily ranges from the micro to the macro, skipping from phytoplankton to blue whales, and rising from the 2-mile depths of Monterey Canyon to mile-high coastal peaks where California condors glide along the thermals. [...] As a reader you are invited to join him on a journey of discovery-not as a passenger but as an active partner. -San Francisco Chronicle Much of the writing on beaches and coasts betrays an Atlantic bias, which is part of what makes Obi Kaufmann's The Coasts of California, the fourth installment in his California Field Atlas series, an original contribution to the genre. In 639 pages, Kaufmann, a naturalist, writer, and illustrator, tackles the geography and ecology of California's 840-mile-long Pacific coastline in immersive detail. -Los Angeles Review of Books Kaufmann spent a year, seven days a week, delving into and recording what's on the coastline, in complex and dynamic detail, to produce a substantive, colorfully interpretive, frequently poetic 'atlas.' [...] The natural world of California's coasts is surprising in its depth and complexity. And as captured by a diligent and experienced observer, unbelievably beautiful as well. -The Press Democrat In words and charts, in watercolors and maps, this field atlas takes the reader on a tour from the microscopic plankton that create the richness of the California Current just offshore, to the large-scale ocean weather patterns that carry storms and create the coast's temperate Mediterranean climate. The book is an exploration of the varied, three-dimensional, and inseparable forces that make this coast what it is today, and could shape its future. -Cameron Walker, Terrain The Coasts of California is a paean to the beauty and diversity of the littoral, unfolding in evocative essays and lovingly-rendered watercolors of the flora and fauna that live at the edges of the land. -Alisa Carroll, HENRY magazine The Coasts of California is a great addition to a collection of field guides or atlases that are also art books-this one has over 400 of the author's signature watercolors and maps. While providing precious information on trails, the shifting of rocks, sand and special habitats, Kaufmann's books can also be described as philosophical meditations written with surprisingly poetic prose. -Monterey County Weekly Obi wants to inspire us to be optimistic, not fatalistic about the world we find ourselves in. Stories of recovery are all around us if we open our eyes. He believes we can, indeed, reverse course and save what we have inherited. -EcoNews