In 1997, Gessner published
A Wild, Rank Place, a short memoir about spending a year on
Cape Cod and tending to his father, who was dying of cancer. The book subverted the typical
Thoreauvian year-in-the-woods theme with its dark themes and blunt language. This was followed by
Under the Devil’s Thumb, a collection of essays about an easterner's years spent in the west, years made more vital and radiant by the author's own recovery from testicular cancer. Since 2001, Gessner has published seven more books that combine memoir with humor and observations of the natural world, beginning with
Return of the Osprey, in 2001.
The Boston Globe and
Book of the Month Club both chose Osprey as one of the top ten nonfiction books of 2001, the Globe calling it a "classic of American Nature Writing". In 2003, Gessner published
Sick of Nature.
Sick of Nature has been much-anthologized and taught at
MIT and
Harvard University and many other colleges. Of
Sick of Nature, renowned eco-critic Michael Branch wrote, "Gessner has positioned himself as a sort of
Woody Allen of environmental writers" and "like Emerson, who observed that the dead forms of institutional practice must be revivified through radical acts of intellectual, aesthetic, and moral imagination, Gessner rails against the narrowness of environmental literature to open the field to new (if less earnest) approaches." This was followed by
The Prophet of Dry Hill, which described a series of encounters with the great nature writer
John Hay. In
Soaring with Fidel, released in April 2007, Gessner continued to push the nature genre, following the entire 7,000 mile migration of ospreys from
New England to Cuba and Venezuela. ==Bibliography==