Tag Archives: Orion Magazine

Orion Magazine – WINTER 2026 – Nature & Culture

ORION MAGAZINE: The Winter 2026 Issue features  the elusive cryptid—creatures that, despite mysterious sightings, dedicated societies, and extensive mythologizing, have not been scientifically proven to exist. Across the issue, writers grapple with questions of belief: Why do we want to believe in the things that we do? What might our enthusiastic focus on creatures like Bigfoot be preventing us from seeing, and protecting, in the real world? What do the stories we tell about the natural world really reveal about ourselves? Ranging from the playful to the impassioned, the fantastical to the deadly serious, Cryptids: On the Trail of Bigfoot and Other Improbable Beasts offers a tour through a menagerie both real and imagined. Inside:


  • Jeff VanderMeer asks what the widespread fascination with Bigfoot might be preventing people from appreciating in the world around them
  • J. Drew Lanham wades into the debates about the extinction of the ivory-billed woodpecker
  • Tove Danovich investigates a bizarre pattern of cattle mutilations in the West
  • Katherine Cusumano dives into the myths and the muck of the Gowanus Canal
  • Lance Richardson retraces the steps of Peter Matthiessen in his legendary quest for the snow leopard

Orion Magazine – Summer 2025 – Nature & Culture

Summer 2025 Issue - Orion Magazine

ORION MAGAZINE (May 30, 2025): The Summer 2025 Issue features ….

Out of the Ashes

Examined Life – How fungi are surviving—and even thriving—in a warming world

Natural Intelligence

A photo of mushrooms growing out of mushrooms. The photo is taken with a blue background

Mushrooms made the world what it is by Maria Popova

Foodways

Intuitive Eating

A black and white illustration of Merlin Sheldrake, Jeff VanderMeer, and Kaitlin Smith surrounded by pink and brown round abstract shapes

On poison, pleasure, and trust by Erica Berry

A New Naturalism

Four writers reflect on the rhizomatic network of self, society, and ecology

Corey PressmanMerlin SheldrakeKaitlin Smith and Jeff Vandermeer

Nature & The Arts: Orion Magazine – Spring 2023

Image

Orion Magazine (Spring 2023)THIS ISSUE features exclusively works in or about translation, engaging with over twenty-five languages across six continents.

Moving the Saints

Passages from a deconstructed homeland

The Northern Mariana Islands lie in a crescent moon south-southeast of Japan. At the lower point is Guåhan, also known as Guam, an island that is geologically part of the same volcanic chain but that set itself apart by becoming an unincorporated U.S. territory instead of remaining part of the Commonwealth.

Corporeal River

On a body filled by the Amazon
Origami art by Gonzalo García Calvo

BANZEIRO—THIS IS WHAT THE PEOPLE of the Xingu call places where the river grows savage. Where, if you’re lucky, you can make it through; where, if you’re not, you can’t. It is a place of danger between where you’re coming from and where you want to go.

10 Beautiful Books in or About Translation

Our Spring 2023 issue speaks to the language of nature and features works in or about translation. Here, Orion staffers and friends pulled together a list of their favorite fiction and nonfiction books that in some way reflect this literature of etymology.

—Sumanth Prabhaker

THE BLUE FOX SJÓN

TRANSLATED BY VICTORIA CRIBB

The Blue Fox - Sjón

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

This slim fantastical novel reads like an incantation. Set in rural late-19th century Iceland, its braided, lyrical, fugue-like narrative is tender and electric. Here we find a cruel priest named after a monster, trapped in an ice cave, raving at a dead fox. But too, a kindly herbalist burying his friend with her feather collection—a young woman with Down syndrome who spoke a language of her own—who he rescued from an unthinkable fate. This was my first encounter reading Sjón, who is apparently so big in his home country he doesn’t need a last name, but the book’s otherworldliness made perfect sense when I learned he writes lyrics for Björk. This one will haunt me for a while.

Why Fish Don’t Exist: A Story of Loss, Love, and the Hidden Order of Life

By LULU MILLER

Why Fish Don't Exist: A Story of Loss, Love, and the Hidden Order of Life - Miller, Lulu

Simon and Schuster

In Lulu Miller’s Why Fish Don’t Exist, naming becomes an imposition, an attempt at order and, sometimes, hierarchy. In this book—part memoir, part biography—Miller is searching for a reason to keep living, a sense of order in a chaotic world, and she does so by looking to a taxonomist who spent his life naming the creatures under the sea: David Starr Jordan.