“The Return of the Mustangs” — a novel by American writer Claire Bennet, released at the end of 2025 and immediately becoming a literary event. The book is not just about wild horses. It is a philosophical allegory about the boundaries of human intervention in nature, about the right of a living creature to die without rescuers, and that sometimes the best help is non-interference. In 2026, the novel was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and Netflix plans to adapt it for the screen. Let's figure out what made this book so captivating to readers and critics.Plot: Return to a Place Without ReturnThe action takes place in our time in the state of Nevada. The main character is a biologist-evolutionist, Emma Rodriguez, who has studied mustangs all her life. She witnesses a catastrophic drought destroying pastures in a reserve. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) plans to shoot the "excess" mustangs to save the remaining vegetation. Emma, along with a group of volunteers, tries to drive the herd to northern regions where, according to satellite data, there is still water. But the mustangs refuse to go. They return to the dried-up lake where they stand until they fall from thirst. Emma understands: they have chosen death on their native land, not salvation in captivity. The novel ends with a scene where the last stallion lies down on the salt and closes his eyes. But in the epilogue, two years later, after the rains, new sprouts of grass appear on the same spot — and mustangs, who once went north, come from afar. The circle is closed.Philosophy: The Right to WildnessThe main idea of Bennet's novel is that "wild" means "independent, including in the choice of death." Unlike most eco-novels, where the main characters save animals, here salvation turns out to be a form of violence. Emma realizes: by driving the mustangs to the north, she will doom them to eternal dependence on humans — feeding, treatment, control over the population. It's better to die free. This challenge to ...
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