The Coyote and the Cougar: A New England Memoir
The Coyote and the Cougar is a literary memoir blending political theory, allegory, and personal witness to examine the cost of living between identities; immigrant and citizen, insider and exile. Using the ancient story of the erev rav as a framework, it reflects on belonging, power, and survival outside accepted categories. The “coyote” and “cougar” symbolize contrasting forms of masculine survival in modern America: the cunning outsider and the wounded territorial figure. Through experiences in governance, refugee resettlement, corrections, and community organizing, the author connects personal history with broader political and social tensions. Part memoir, part civic critique, the book questions what belonging remains possible once faith in institutions erodes. Written in a shifting, self-questioning voice that moves between confession, dialogue, and reportage, it speaks to readers drawn to language, skepticism, and what endures after political slogans fade.