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Facing the Change
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Through personal and vivid encounters with climate change, this diverse array of writers inspires readers toward awareness and action.
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15 October 2013
"Amidst the current deluge of statistics about global warming, this book provides a refreshing look at how individuals are affected. This is a beautiful book to keep near, open at random, and share the words of gifted writers as they prepare for the coming changes."
—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Facing the Change is a new kind of book about climate change. Instead of experts talking at us, this innovative literary collection shares the voices of fellow citizens struggling to make sense of the concrete changes taking place in our world today. Instead of scientific facts and predictions, this book offers personal essays, poems, and short stories expressing what’s going on in people's lives, hearts, and dreams. Instead of leaving readers guilty and disempowered, this book will help us all to begin to work through the full range of emotions—confusion, fear, sorrow, anger, and realistic hope—that we must face in confronting the crisis. Showcasing the voices of a wide range of authors—from prize–winning writers and poets such as Roxana Robinson, Audrey Schulman, and Barbara Crooker, to regular citizens and young people—Facing the Change offers a new opportunity for moving past denial and despair to awareness and action.
—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Facing the Change is a new kind of book about climate change. Instead of experts talking at us, this innovative literary collection shares the voices of fellow citizens struggling to make sense of the concrete changes taking place in our world today. Instead of scientific facts and predictions, this book offers personal essays, poems, and short stories expressing what’s going on in people's lives, hearts, and dreams. Instead of leaving readers guilty and disempowered, this book will help us all to begin to work through the full range of emotions—confusion, fear, sorrow, anger, and realistic hope—that we must face in confronting the crisis. Showcasing the voices of a wide range of authors—from prize–winning writers and poets such as Roxana Robinson, Audrey Schulman, and Barbara Crooker, to regular citizens and young people—Facing the Change offers a new opportunity for moving past denial and despair to awareness and action.
Price: $14.95
Pages: 173
Publisher: Torrey House Press
Imprint: Torrey House Press
Publication Date:
15 October 2013
Trim Size: 8.00 X 5.25 in
ISBN: 9781937226275
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection, SCIENCE / Global Warming & Climate Change, LITERARY COLLECTIONS / American / General, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Nature
"Steven Pavlos Holmes offers a rich, refreshing, and much–needed collection of personal responses to climate change. Though the volume is slender, its selections of poetry and prose—written over the past ten years by a variety of mostly lesser–known authors—provide a tonal and emotional diversity that makes the collection accessible."
—ISLE
"One puts down this book with a real sense of hope for the future. It is also a book worth dipping into from time to time, yielding enough variety to sustain a re–reading, enough urgency in its many voices to remind us why we need to act, and enough wisdom in its insights to persuade us that we can each make a difference."
—GREEN LETTERS: STUDIES IN ECOCRITICISM
"Amidst the current deluge of statistics about global warming, this book provides a refreshing look at how individuals are affected. This is a beautiful book to keep near, open at random, and share the words of gifted writers as they prepare for the coming changes."
—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Holmes, a scholar in environmental humanities, has assembled a rich, varied collection of personal accounts and poems…An artistic and intimate approach to the problem that humanizes our concerns."
—BOOKLIST
"Steven Holmes has gathered compelling testimonies about the ways our earthly home is changing in the short space of our own lifetimes. They beg us to pay attention and act. We are wise to heed these passionate voices."
—CHIP WARD, author of Stony Mesa Sagas
"These earnest and heartfelt poems, essays, and imaginings change our discourse from data to personal testimony, channeling 'care and concern.' Maybe, just maybe, these authors who call us to 'unheroic' action 'on life's behalf' will steer us away from tragedy and chaos."
—STEPHEN TRIMBLE, editor of Red Rock Stories
"Facing the Change shares the stories of some of the many people in the US and the world who are already witnessing climate change here and now. They are giving us early warning signs; it's up to all of us to act now."
—MAE BOEVE, executive director, 350.org
"Facing the Change registers the impact of climate destabilization, not only on the sky above us and the earth beneath our feet, but also within our hearts. The voices in this eloquent and original book convey the dread and grief, the anger, but also the experiences of love and community that are intensified by the defining ecological challenge of our time."
—JOHN ELDER, author of Reading the Mountains of Home
"These eloquent stories, essays, and poems by scores of 'emotional and cultural first responders' to the effects of climate change are sure to deliver a powerful wake–up call to anyone who has supposed that nothing an individual person can say or do will affect this impending disaster."
—LAWRENCE BUELL, author of The Environmental Imagination
—ISLE
"One puts down this book with a real sense of hope for the future. It is also a book worth dipping into from time to time, yielding enough variety to sustain a re–reading, enough urgency in its many voices to remind us why we need to act, and enough wisdom in its insights to persuade us that we can each make a difference."
—GREEN LETTERS: STUDIES IN ECOCRITICISM
"Amidst the current deluge of statistics about global warming, this book provides a refreshing look at how individuals are affected. This is a beautiful book to keep near, open at random, and share the words of gifted writers as they prepare for the coming changes."
—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Holmes, a scholar in environmental humanities, has assembled a rich, varied collection of personal accounts and poems…An artistic and intimate approach to the problem that humanizes our concerns."
—BOOKLIST
"Steven Holmes has gathered compelling testimonies about the ways our earthly home is changing in the short space of our own lifetimes. They beg us to pay attention and act. We are wise to heed these passionate voices."
—CHIP WARD, author of Stony Mesa Sagas
"These earnest and heartfelt poems, essays, and imaginings change our discourse from data to personal testimony, channeling 'care and concern.' Maybe, just maybe, these authors who call us to 'unheroic' action 'on life's behalf' will steer us away from tragedy and chaos."
—STEPHEN TRIMBLE, editor of Red Rock Stories
"Facing the Change shares the stories of some of the many people in the US and the world who are already witnessing climate change here and now. They are giving us early warning signs; it's up to all of us to act now."
—MAE BOEVE, executive director, 350.org
"Facing the Change registers the impact of climate destabilization, not only on the sky above us and the earth beneath our feet, but also within our hearts. The voices in this eloquent and original book convey the dread and grief, the anger, but also the experiences of love and community that are intensified by the defining ecological challenge of our time."
—JOHN ELDER, author of Reading the Mountains of Home
"These eloquent stories, essays, and poems by scores of 'emotional and cultural first responders' to the effects of climate change are sure to deliver a powerful wake–up call to anyone who has supposed that nothing an individual person can say or do will affect this impending disaster."
—LAWRENCE BUELL, author of The Environmental Imagination
STEVEN PAVLOS HOLMES, Ph.D., is an independent scholar, editor, and educator in the environmental humanities, with a special interest in people's personal experiences of the natural world. His first book, The Young John Muir: An Environmental Biography, won the Modern Language Association's Prize for Independent Scholars, and he has presented papers and workshops at numerous academic and literary conferences. He earned a doctorate in American cultural history from Harvard University, has taught both at Harvard and at the Cambridge (Mass.) Center for Adult Education, and has worked on innovative projects with The Wilderness Society and Massachusetts Audubon's Boston Nature Center. He currently lives, gardens, and watches birds in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, with his partner Carlene Pavlos and their cat, Millet.
Introduction 1
Part I: Observations
1. Strangely Warmed 6
About the Weather / Harry Smith, Maine
Snowshoe Hare / Roxana Robinson, Maine
On the Eve of the Invasion of Iraq / Todd Davis, Pennsylvania
Be Prepared to Evacuate / Tara L. Masih, Massachusetts
Weather Weirding, 2012 / Barbara Crooker, Pennsylvania
A Guest in the House / Paul Sohar, New Jersey
The Things We Say When We Say Goodbye
Alan Davis, Minnesota
2. Species Out of Joint 27
Search / Margarita Engle, California
To Wit, to Woo / Kathryn Miles, Maine
Winter Visions / Paul Sohar, New Jersey
Trees of Fire and Rust
Margaret Hammitt-McDonald, Oregon
Burning to Zero / Carla A. Wise, Oregon
A Jungle for My Backyard / Golda Mowe, Malaysia
3. Bearing Witness 57
Edged off Existence / Audrey Schulman, Massachusetts
Ursus Maritimus Horribilis / Diane Gage, California
Thin Line Between / Marybeth Holleman, Alaska
Polar Bears / J. R. Solonche, New York
Part II: Generations
4. The Gifts We’re Giving Our Children 74
Learning Their Names as They Go / Kristin Berger, Oregon
The Darkness / Lilace Mellin Guignard, Pennsylvania
The Innocence of Ice
Jamie Sweitzer Brandstadter, Pennsylvania
Annapolis Bus Ride / Julie Dunlap, Maryland
The Last Days / Dane Cervine, California
5. Future Imperfect 87
The Last Snow in Abilene / Benjamin Morris, Mississippi
Blue Sky / Penny Harter, New Jersey
After / Jo Salas, New York
First Day at School / Katerina Stoykova-Klemer, Kentucky
A Small Sedition / Ellen Bihler, New Jersey
Tiny Black Rocks / Rachel M. Augustine, New York
Part III: Revolutions
6. Twistings 107
Late Night News / Malaika King Albrecht, North Carolina
The Wind / Jim O’Donnell, New Mexico
A Shocking Admission of Heroic Fantasy / Jill Riddell, Illinois
The Watcher / Susan Palmer, Colorado
Hopeless for Today / Helen Sanchez, Montana
Wrath of Human upon Gaia / Quynh Nguyen, Florida
7. Turnings 125
Strand Sonnets / Kathryn Kirkpatrick, North Carolina
Beyond Denial / Willow Fagan, Michigan
Glooscap Makes America Known to the Europeans
Sydney Landon Plum, Massachusetts
Credo / Charlie Krause, Maine
Doing Work, Causing Change / Monica Woelfel, California
How to Be a Climate Hero / Audrey Schulman, Massachusetts
Coda 159
The Lucky Ones / Penny Harter, New Jersey
The Angels Are Rebelling / Barbara Crooker, Pennsylvania
About the Authors 162
Acknowledgments 172
Part I: Observations
1. Strangely Warmed 6
About the Weather / Harry Smith, Maine
Snowshoe Hare / Roxana Robinson, Maine
On the Eve of the Invasion of Iraq / Todd Davis, Pennsylvania
Be Prepared to Evacuate / Tara L. Masih, Massachusetts
Weather Weirding, 2012 / Barbara Crooker, Pennsylvania
A Guest in the House / Paul Sohar, New Jersey
The Things We Say When We Say Goodbye
Alan Davis, Minnesota
2. Species Out of Joint 27
Search / Margarita Engle, California
To Wit, to Woo / Kathryn Miles, Maine
Winter Visions / Paul Sohar, New Jersey
Trees of Fire and Rust
Margaret Hammitt-McDonald, Oregon
Burning to Zero / Carla A. Wise, Oregon
A Jungle for My Backyard / Golda Mowe, Malaysia
3. Bearing Witness 57
Edged off Existence / Audrey Schulman, Massachusetts
Ursus Maritimus Horribilis / Diane Gage, California
Thin Line Between / Marybeth Holleman, Alaska
Polar Bears / J. R. Solonche, New York
Part II: Generations
4. The Gifts We’re Giving Our Children 74
Learning Their Names as They Go / Kristin Berger, Oregon
The Darkness / Lilace Mellin Guignard, Pennsylvania
The Innocence of Ice
Jamie Sweitzer Brandstadter, Pennsylvania
Annapolis Bus Ride / Julie Dunlap, Maryland
The Last Days / Dane Cervine, California
5. Future Imperfect 87
The Last Snow in Abilene / Benjamin Morris, Mississippi
Blue Sky / Penny Harter, New Jersey
After / Jo Salas, New York
First Day at School / Katerina Stoykova-Klemer, Kentucky
A Small Sedition / Ellen Bihler, New Jersey
Tiny Black Rocks / Rachel M. Augustine, New York
Part III: Revolutions
6. Twistings 107
Late Night News / Malaika King Albrecht, North Carolina
The Wind / Jim O’Donnell, New Mexico
A Shocking Admission of Heroic Fantasy / Jill Riddell, Illinois
The Watcher / Susan Palmer, Colorado
Hopeless for Today / Helen Sanchez, Montana
Wrath of Human upon Gaia / Quynh Nguyen, Florida
7. Turnings 125
Strand Sonnets / Kathryn Kirkpatrick, North Carolina
Beyond Denial / Willow Fagan, Michigan
Glooscap Makes America Known to the Europeans
Sydney Landon Plum, Massachusetts
Credo / Charlie Krause, Maine
Doing Work, Causing Change / Monica Woelfel, California
How to Be a Climate Hero / Audrey Schulman, Massachusetts
Coda 159
The Lucky Ones / Penny Harter, New Jersey
The Angels Are Rebelling / Barbara Crooker, Pennsylvania
About the Authors 162
Acknowledgments 172