Edward Abbey wrote that part of love is anger, and Amy Irvine tries to untangle the two in her new book, Desert Cabal: A New Season in the Wilderness (Torrey House Press; $12). The book is a counternarrative to Desert Solitaire: A Season in the Wilderness, the cornerstone of Abbey鈥檚 canon, in which he observed humanity鈥檚 relationship with nature from his post as a ranger at Arches National Park. Abbey changed Irvine鈥檚 life, as he did for many people who feel drawn to the desert dirtbag life, but 50 years after Solitaire was first published, his vision of environmentalism feels narrow. So Irvine sits down in the desert, cracks a beer, and confronts Cactus Ed about his attitude.
Abbey鈥檚 self-claimed country, she says, is at risk for exactly the reasons he said it would be: greed, gasoline, and a gaping well of apathy. Preserving wilderness is even more important now than it was half a century ago, but the stakes aren鈥檛 as simple as he set them out to be. The resulting book has riled up some Abbey fans, but that鈥檚 exactly what makes it an important read.
In her imagined conversations with Abbey, Irvine is a little glib with the right-now references (talking to Ed about Twitter feels heavy-handed), but Desert Cabal is indeed a book for right now. She gets into the current rage brewing over public land and agency, the ties between women鈥檚 anger and environmentalism, and how we鈥檝e chopped up land that once felt limitless. Her words are sharp, and they shed necessary light on how the country Abbey loved has changed.
But Irvine also acknowledges that there鈥檚 an ease to being angry like Abbey was, in a single, structural direction. And that rage isn鈥檛 afforded to people who don鈥檛 have his privilege.
Abbey treats everyone who isn鈥檛 him as the Other. He says people are the problem, without acknowledging that he, in fact, is a person. He minimizes tribes and women. Even fat dudes don鈥檛 pass muster, and forget about tourists, like the dead man he helps bring out of Grandview Point in Solitaire. That鈥檚 Irvine鈥檚 biggest beef. Abbey has become the standard bearer for a passionate wilderness ethic that values wildness over anything else, but we can鈥檛 operate the way he did, and we can鈥檛 rely on him to show us the way.

I read Irvine鈥檚 skinny 100-page book twice. And then, for the first time in a long while, I went back to my tattered copy of Desert Solitaire, which I stole from my college roommate when I was 19, living in northern Maine and trying to get to the desert, where I could be tougher and wilder. The fire and gleam of Abbey鈥檚 writing got up in my ribs. There鈥檚 a real romance in claiming wild country as your own and in the idea that to understand wilderness, you have to scratch through it with your fingernails like Abbey did, with a rope that鈥檚 too short. I wanted to see how much of my long-term love for the book was nostalgia.
Abbey鈥檚 writing is beautiful, but he lacks empathy, and that kind of callousness feels outdated now. He鈥檚 writing about womanizing and warm bodies, when in reality he had a wife and kids at home鈥攁 fact he never mentions in the book. He鈥檚 tossing Coors cans out the window of his truck with zero care for the landscape beyond his sphere of importance. That image of independence and disregard for the rules might sound romantic, but the littering and the lies feel self-centered now. There鈥檚 a disconnect between feeling and action.
Irvine feels the ache of how much the landscape has changed as well. She鈥檚 shaken by desert potholes scrimmed with sunscreen and Red Bull, and Jeeps ripping through cryptobiotic soil. But she鈥檚 jaded in a less individualistic way鈥擨rvine knows it will take collaboration and political action to protect the landscape. 鈥淲e have been emulating a misanthropic model that can breed intolerance and exclusion,鈥 she writes. 鈥淭he wilderness movement, like wilderness itself, should operate as a model of interdependence, not independence.鈥 Irvine tells Abbey how the Trump administration has rolled back protections for clean air and water. Each of her chapters is a response to one of his, to check his reality and show that we can鈥檛 just monkeywrench our way back to untouched wilderness.
Fifty years of Abbey is a long game of telephone as his stories have been retold and mythologized. The canonical parts are baked into our brains and scrawled on T-shirts in Moab. The deeply racist diatribes are less so, as are the vainglorious anti-establishment rants, but in Desert Cabal, Irvine reminds us that they鈥檙e all there. And her retelling has drummed up another kind of anger.
Perhaps because Abbey fans are so passionate, there has been pushback to the book. The writer Doug Peacock, a friend of Abbey鈥檚 and the model for Hayduke in The Monkey Wrench Gang, says that Abbey was wrongly mislabeled as misanthropic, and he doesn鈥檛 think it鈥檚 fair to paint him in today鈥檚 light. 鈥漁ne should be careful writing intimately about a defenseless dead writer, implying (in the version I read) he was a less than exemplary father when his widow and children are standing by,鈥 he wrote in an email, saying he didn鈥檛 like the book.
Moab鈥檚 Back of Beyond bookstore, which started as a legacy to Abbey and also helped publish Desert Cabal, canceled its planned 50th anniversary celebration of Solitaire due to conflicts over the book. Andy Nettell, owner of Back of Beyond, says that Peacock鈥檚 reaction is part of why he thinks Desert Cabal is important鈥攊t reflects a changing environmental ethic and the rise of the #MeToo movement and broadens the scope of stories. He thought it was crucial to have a woman鈥檚 voice in the conversation. 鈥淎my鈥檚 run into a couple of old-school white males who have taken her to task. I sense that there was this very protective feeling, of protecting Ed, protecting Ed鈥檚 legacy,鈥 Nettell says. 鈥淭he feedback initially upset me, but then it energized me, because it鈥檚 underscoring the whole point. It鈥檚 hard to go back to it, but it鈥檚 caused a lot of people to reexamine Desert Solitaire.鈥 Nettell didn鈥檛 want to shy away from controversy, in part because Abbey wouldn鈥檛 have. He says he often hears from young women and people of color who come into the shop that Solitaire falls flat for them because they can鈥檛 see themselves in it, so he was glad to give them more options. Abbey is still front and center鈥攎etaphorically and literally鈥攚hen you walk into the shop, but he鈥檚 not alone on the shelf.
It鈥檚 hard to reread and dissect the things you鈥檝e always held true, but it is 2018, and most of us are deep in the shitty reality of recognizing that our idols are fallible humans. Now we鈥檙e in the slow, picky process of starting to tell our own stories, not just sitting with the literary canon. That鈥檚 the balance of love and anger. You can appreciate Abbey without needing to follow him.
A cabal is a gang, so Irvine鈥檚 title is also her thesis: We need more voices. 鈥淚f we want to save the wild remains of the nation, we鈥檒l need a broader, more cooperative constituency that includes women, indigenous people, and other underrepresented others,鈥 she writes. 鈥淎nd we鈥檒l have to tread more lightly.鈥 Treading lightly comes from thinking about hard ideas. My biggest complaint about the book is that I wish she鈥檇 pushed it one step further. I wish she鈥檇 written her own narrative instead of responding to Abbey. I want to hear stories that aren鈥檛 his.
Three Other New Books We鈥檙e Excited About
鈥楥ongratulations, Who Are You Again?鈥 by Harrison Scott Key
国产吃瓜黑料 contributor Harrison Scott Key鈥檚 memoir about what it means to be a writer鈥攁nd why anyone would put themselves through the torture鈥攊s poignant and funny. Read it if you liked his 国产吃瓜黑料 essay 鈥My Dad Tried to Kill Me with an Alligator.鈥
鈥楴ine Perfect Strangers鈥 by Liane Moriarty
If you鈥檙e skeptical of the whole cult of wellness, this novel from the author of Big Little Lies will give you plenty of fodder for snark. Read it if you liked Taffy Brodesser-Akner鈥檚 feature 鈥We Have Found the Cure! (Sort Of).鈥
鈥楾he Curse of Oak Island: The Story of the World鈥檚 Longest Treasure Hunt鈥 by Randall Sullivan
For more than 200 years, treasure hunters have been trying to find supposed buried treasure on an island off Nova Scotia. Sullivan tags along on a recent quest and digs into the history. Read it if you liked Peter Frick-Wright鈥檚 feature 鈥On the Hunt for America鈥檚 Last Great Treasure.鈥