The best known and most beloved work of literary pioneer Mary Austin,
1903's *The Land of Little Rain* is a collection of 14 vignettes
paying poetic homage to the arid beauty of the lands of Death Valley and
the Mojave. An amateur naturalist and a keen observer of human influence
on the landscape, Austin here introduces us, in her inimitable way, to
the wildlife, the people, and the unique problems and attractions of
these sandy reaches in such essays as "The Mesa Trail," "Shoshone Land,"
"Water Borders," "Nurslings of the Sky," and others. The author herself
believed that she had "done for the desert what Thoreau did for New
England." Lovers of natural philosophy are sure to agree. American
author MARY HUNTER AUSTIN (1868-1934) wrote numerous novels, poems,
plays, and works of criticism, much of it centered on feminist,
environmental, and multicultural issues. She is best remembered for her
writing on matters concerning Native American rights and the deserts of
the American Southwest.