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The University of Cape Town’s African Studies Library, ravaged by wildfire, needs your help.

The University of Cape Town’s African Studies Library, ravaged by wildfire, needs your help.

By Walker Caplan | April 21, 2021

Vulnerability Never Ends: Madeleine Watts on Coming-of-Age Amidst Climate Catastrophe

Vulnerability Never Ends: Madeleine Watts on Coming-of-Age Amidst Climate Catastrophe

Madelaine Lucas in Conversation With the Author of The Inland Sea

By Madelaine Lucas | April 21, 2021

Can We Leave Our Thneed Culture Behind, Post-Pandemic?

Can We Leave Our Thneed Culture Behind, Post-Pandemic?

Paul Greenberg in Conversation with Andrew Keen on Keen On

By Keen On | April 20, 2021

On the Meeting Place of Scientific Knowledge and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

On the Meeting Place of Scientific Knowledge and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

This Week on the Emergence Magazine Podcast

By Emergence Magazine | April 19, 2021

On the Literature of Rewilding… and the Need to Rewild Literature

On the Literature of Rewilding… and the Need to Rewild Literature

Phoebe Hamilton-Jones Finds Non-Human Perspectives in Max Porter, Sarah Hall, Daisy Johnson, and More

By Phoebe Hamilton Jones | April 14, 2021

On the Necessary (and Inevitable) Rise of the Nature Memoir: A Reading List

On the Necessary (and Inevitable) Rise of the Nature Memoir: A Reading List

Raynor Winn Recommends the Books That Reignited Her
Connection to the Wild

By Raynor Winn | April 9, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Glyph
  • Dog Days
  • All Them Dogs
  • A Perfect Hand
  • Keeper of My Kin: Memoir of an Immigrant Daughter
  • Talking Classics: The Shock of the Old

Billion-Year Histories and Birding While Black: Your Climate
Readings for April

By Amy Brady | April 8, 2021

Born to Rewild: Jeff VanderMeer on What It Means to Restore Your Own Little Part of the World

By Drew Broussard | April 5, 2021

On the Accidental Career of E.O. Wilson

By David Quammen | March 26, 2021

Telling Tales of Climate Collapse: Novelists Weigh In

Telling Tales of Climate Collapse: Novelists Weigh In

Part Two of Amy Brady’s Conversation with Pitchaya Sudbanthad, Madeleine Watts,
Diane Wilson, and More

By Amy Brady | March 25, 2021

What Happens When Apex Predators Take Over the Planet

What Happens When Apex Predators Take Over the Planet

Stefano Mancuso on the Extinctions of the Anthropocene

By Stefano Mancuso | March 25, 2021

How Contemporary Novelists Are Confronting Climate Collapse in Fiction

How Contemporary Novelists Are Confronting Climate Collapse in Fiction

Part One of a Roundtable with Kim Stanley Robinson, Lydia Millet,
John Lanchester, Omar El Akkad, and More

By Amy Brady | March 24, 2021

<em>Unsolaced</em> by Gretel Ehrlich, Read by the Author

Unsolaced by Gretel Ehrlich, Read by the Author

Celebrating—and Mourning—Changes on Earth
While Traveling the Globe

By Behind the Mic | March 10, 2021

Elizabeth Kolbert: Cleaning Up America’s Filthy Rivers May Be a Neverending Job

Elizabeth Kolbert: Cleaning Up America’s Filthy Rivers May Be a Neverending Job

“First you reverse a river. Then you electrify it.”

By Elizabeth Kolbert | March 9, 2021

<em>Under a White Sky</em> by Elizabeth Kolbert, Read by Rebecca Lowman

Under a White Sky by Elizabeth Kolbert, Read by Rebecca Lowman

Examining the Future of Our Environment

By Behind the Mic | March 9, 2021

Beasts, Bears, Seeds, and Spring: Your Climate Readings<br> for March

Beasts, Bears, Seeds, and Spring: Your Climate Readings
for March

Amy Brady Recommends Five New Books That Engage with
the Climate Crisis

By Amy Brady | March 4, 2021

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    • The Best Debut Novels of the Month: May 2026May 22, 2026 by Molly Odintz
    • 6 Mysteries Featuring Miniatures, Effigies, and Tiny ScenesMay 22, 2026 by Diane Josefowicz
    • Glyph
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "In her feisty graceful em Glyph em Ali Smith mulls writing and language among other…"
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