Believers Making a life at the end of the world

Lisa Wells, 1982-

Book - 2021

"Poet and essayist Lisa Wells takes us on a pilgrimage to the margins, where trailblazers and outliers imagine new ways to live and reconnect to the Earth in the face of climate change"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Wells, 1982- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
336 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780374110253
  • Introduction
  • 1. Across the Desert Our Bread is Blooming!
  • 2. On the Rise and Fall of a Teenage Idealist
  • 3. Promised Lands
  • 4. Notes on a Living Trail
  • 5. The Problem of Other People
  • 6. To Live Together
  • 7. In the Garden
  • 8. Restoring Paradise
  • Afterword
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poet Wells (The Fix) focuses this dense and eclectic survey on "relatively ordinary people" who, in the face of climate change, believe in creating a better future. Aiming to add hope to conversations often filled with doom, Wells takes readers on a tour of individuals focused on connecting with--and restoring--nature. In the Oregon woods, she meets "the Portuguese Sherlock Holmes," a man "rumored to be one of the best trackers alive" and whose abilities hinge on a deep knowledge of ecosystems. Matthew Trumm, meanwhile, had his life upended by 2018's Camp Fire in Paradise, Calif., which Wells describes in shocking and vivid detail. Trumm, along with John D. Liu, a land restoration expert and documentarian, founded the Camp Fire Restoration Project in 2019. The people profiled come across as optimistic and resilient, and so too does the author. Her descriptions of climate change captures the harsh reality of devastation, and her musings often lean poetic ("I'm fond of the idea of being 'of Rubble'.... I like how 'rubble' echoes 'rabble,' the disorderly mob of the ordinary"). Still, her curiosity keeps things moving: "What legacy will we choose to leave behind," she wonders. Climate-minded readers should take note of this roving account of perseverance. (July)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Seeking new ways to live on Earth. Reflecting on the fragile state of the environment, poet and essayist Wells melds memoir, history, psychology, and philosophy as she recounts her ongoing struggle to define her role as "an average, well-meaning person who daily participates--however grudgingly--in a system that is bringing the planet she loves to the brink of destruction." With a growing desire to learn about ways "in which human beings not only thrive but also repair damage and even increase the biodiversity and beauty of the planet," the author traveled around the country to find people--including eccentric activists, urban gadflies, botanists, and Native Americans--who have devoted themselves to honoring the Earth. In Oregon, she met the irascible Finisia Medrano and her queer band of Prairie Faeries, who range around fields and woods, living on and replenishing wild plants. In New Mexico, Wells lived among the "earth-honoring" Taos Initiative for Life Together, who work to transition from the fossil fuel economy by growing their own food, sourcing their own water, and bartering services within the community in order to generate no waste and repair the local ecosystem. During her visit to the Simple Way intentional community outside of Philadelphia, the author discovered "a multiracial group of radical disciples who'd fixed up several blocks of foreclosed and condemned houses" and set up a farm in an effort to heal a broken urban neighborhood. At the Tactical Tracking Intensive school, Wells learned that tracking humans and animals creates an intimate knowledge of the environment. "If you were estranged from your own ecosystem," she writes, "tracking was a refreshingly straightforward practice for overcoming that estrangement." Wells offers no pat prescriptions for nurturing "lived relationships with water and plants and soil"--only an ardent hope that humans will persist in "fighting and reconciling and reaching across the divide of mutual misapprehension" to save their world. An urgent message gently conveyed. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.