![]() ![]() So the timing couldn’t be better for “Wild Atlanta,” (Wind Eagle Press, $40), a coffee table book of nature-inspired poetry by Stephen Wing and photography by Luz Wright that celebrates Atlanta’s urban forests and pocket parks. Either way, a lot of people I know who barely left their homes before the pandemic are suddenly avid hikers filling my social media feed with closeups of waterfalls, wildflowers and woodland creatures, to my delight. Or maybe being homebound for so long made us realize how much we took the great outdoors for granted. Perhaps it’s because being outdoors, socially distanced from others, was the only safe alternative to being inside our homes, the walls of which seemed to close in on us after a while. ![]() ![]() Ever since the pandemic prompted us to hole up in our homes for a year, a renewed enthusiasm for nature has loomed large in the zeitgeist. ![]()
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