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284 pages, Kindle Edition
Published July 7, 2022
In all the universe, over all time, they are here together, the last bear and the man who is to protect him.
"Dense spruce gives way to more open woods. Most of the pine trees have red needles and mangy patches in their bark, exposing dead blond wood underneath. The beetle has been through this stretch. For decades now, the warmer winters have failed to freeze out the tiny bug, and its spread is unrelenting, burrowing into the wood and sloughing a fungus off its carapace that kills the trees. It doesn't know any better, but it's left a creeping stain across the landscape as it ranges north. Now the forest waits for a fire, and in the meantime, it rains dry needles whenever the wind blows."
"‘Some of the first migrants are suffering them, these vivid, completely immersive dreams of Earth. Where they’re in a jungle or a forest or on the plains, and there’re herds of animals, swarms of insects, and the sounds of birdsong on the breeze....(T)hey say that Earth Dreams are the brain’s way of coping with the fact it’ll never see Earth again.....(A) resurgence of two-hundred-thousand-year-old memories from the deepest folds of our brains, something to comfort those who go farther from home than anyone has ever been, knowing they won’t be returning.....(W)e know how our bodies can deal with it, we don’t have much a clue how our brains will. The primal brain is set up to react, not to think. It’s there to make us survive at all costs. Doesn’t seem out of the question that it would start taking over, fighting for us where our conscious brain has failed. Genetic memory they’re calling it. A manifest of evolution, buried deep in our heads.’"