What do you think?
Rate this book


401 pages, Kindle Edition
First published August 22, 2023























“You sure you really want to go out there in this heat?”Think of this as a downbeat, minor key coda to 2000's wonderfully blistering Jeremiad, A Friend of the Earth, in that while that earlier novel was set in 2025 (and the late 1980s/early 1990s, IIRC) it was really more about warning its contemporary world, circa 2000, to mend their anti-Earth ways before it was too late, and—and, well, now it decidedly is too late. Too late entirely.
“What heat? It’s only going to be one-fifteen.
Her biggest regret was not having installed solar panels when she had the chance—now they were impossible to come by because everybody had the same idea, the whole world sweating as one.This book, then, is set in some unspecified future present in which there is no longer much point in prophecy, for the disasters they are already a-piling up (see partial catastro-list in reading notes below), and the characters (a fair bit less interesting to me personally to the wonderfully-wrought eco-terrorists of the earlier book) try to cope. And so they do cope, more and/or less—as shall we, I guess.
The memory carved out a pit inside her and suddenly she was on the verge of tears. Was it morally defensible to grieve over an animal when the world was such a vast sink of loss?[The answer, or my answer, of course, to that question, and TCB's answer as well, I feel/hope, is a decided yes. Take your pup, your dad, your world for all in all, we shall not look upon their like again, my friends...]