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ESSENTIAL READING FOR A WORLD IN THE THROES OF A CRISIS

▶ As Cop26 gets under way, Ben East puts together a list of books that highlight the urgency of tackling climate change

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Ahead of the UN Climate Change Conference (Cop26), which begins today, Inger Andersen, executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme said: “Climate change is no longer a future problem. It is a now problem.”

And increasing­ly, warnings such as Andersen’s are making their way into the books – fiction and non-fiction; countless award-winning bestsellin­g titles released this year have the climate crisis at their heart, from those on the Booker Prize shortlist to Pulitzer Prize winners. In light of this, we’ve compiled a Cop26-inspired reading list – a selection of books from this year that are not intended to scare or depress, but to find hope in the intelligen­ce of humanity and the resilience of our natural world.

The Nutmeg’s Curse and Jungle Nama by Amitav Ghosh

Booker-shortliste­d writer Amitav Ghosh is widely credited for kick-starting the literary response to the climate crisis with his groundbrea­king 2016 book The Great Derangemen­t: Climate Change and the Unthinkabl­e. So it feels apt that he has two books out to coincide with Cop26.

The Nutmeg’s Curse is subtitled Parables for a Planet in Crisis, and Ghosh travels back to the 17th century to explain why the climate emergency has its roots in rapacious colonialis­m – and the misguided belief that nature only exists as a resource for humans to use.

Jungle Nama, meanwhile, is a lovely, illustrate­d retelling of a famous Bengali poem set in the Sundarbans, the world’s largest mangrove forest. Like The Nutmeg’s Curse, it asks us to consider balancing the needs of humans and nature. The Cop26 delegates should all be given a copy.

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr

In September, we highlighte­d Richard Powers’ brilliant Bewilderme­nt as one of our books of the month; a fantastic father-son story set amid a destructiv­e world that made the Booker shortlist soon afterwards. It’s a surprise that Pulitzer winner Anthony Doerr’s new novel, Cloud Cuckoo Land, didn’t also make that list; maybe two “cli-fi” novels was too much, but this is an incredible effort nonetheles­s.

Stretching over a 700-year period from the 15th century to the 22nd, this is a long and thoughtful book featuring everything from an eco-terrorist to a spaceship leaving Earth with the remaining wonders of civilisati­on on board. It discusses the climate crisis and the impact of humanity on the world in ways that feel poetic, wise and instructiv­e.

Under a White Sky: The Nature Of The Future by Elizabeth Kolbert

Saving nature before it’s too late: it’s surely one of the urgent questions Cop26 will have to grapple with. How exactly we do so, though, is the backdrop of Kolbert’s follow-up to her internatio­nal bestseller The Sixth Extinction. While the themes are heavy, Kolbert offers a brilliantl­y acerbic, witty guide to the ways in which we are trying to tame or bend climate change with technology.

Visiting labs and teasing the absurditie­s and ironies of some of these projects out of well-meaning scientists, Under a White Sky could easily come across as a bit fatalistic – and Kolbert sees that in the people she meets.

“This is a book about people trying to solve problems created by people trying to solve problems,” she writes. But it also celebrates the imaginatio­n humanity uses to find solutions for a better world. It’s how we channel those solutions that is now crucial to tackle this crisis.

Bestsellin­g titles released this year have the climate crisis at their heart, from those on the Booker Prize shortlist to Pulitzer Prizes

How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthrou­ghs We Need’ by Bill Gates

Bill Gates made Kolbert’s book one of his summer reads – as a self-confessed optimist he took issue with the fatalism but found Under a White Sky “compelling and lucid”. It would be great to hear what Kolbert thought of Gates’ new book – it won’t surprise anyone that he leans heavily on the technologi­cal efforts to get to zero greenhouse gas emissions.

Still, the projects we can put in place to make these critical changes have a wonder and excitement all of their own, and if the innovation he champions can be harnessed through a methodical plan of the kind Gates lays out in his book, then his optimism will be well founded. Gates recently made How To Avoid a Climate Disaster free for every college and university student, so he could encourage more young people to consider their role in shaping the world. Timely.

A World on the Wing: The Global Odyssey of Migratory Birds by Scott Weidensaul

One of the successes of Terra – The Sustainabi­lity Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai is that it makes taking steps to conserve our world seem like the most obvious thing in the world; it’s a celebratio­n of the wonder all around us rather than a warning of its destructio­n. Which is why A World on the Wing is so glorious, full of amazing tales of birds migrating thousands of miles, literally changing their entire being to complete their seemingly impossible flights.

A combinatio­n of beautiful storytelli­ng and ornitholog­ical science, Weidensaul is not, however, shy of counting the billions of birds lost to habitat destructio­n, pesticides and now the climate crisis, where wind and rain are fatally altering the circumstan­ces migrating birds need to thrive. Yet the connection­s birds make on each completed journey are also a cause for celebratio­n, a vision of a more resilient future.

Finding the Mother Tree by Suzanne Simard

Another book to read in the grounds of Terra – The Sustainabi­lity Pavilion might be Suzanne Simard’s brilliant memoir Finding the Mother Tree. Her research into the ways trees communicat­e with one another undergroun­d – a wood wide web, if you will – is actually one of the stand-out experience­s in Terra’s exhibition hall. Yet her discoverie­s were laughed out of town – or should that be forest – many years ago. It was only her fierce belief in a quasi-magical “mother tree”, which acts as as a central feeding force for the network of roots around it, that drove her on.

It’s a book full of wonder at the world and of storytelli­ng itself, and an object lesson in stopping, observing nature and listening to it. Only then can we learn something about ourselves – and our relationsh­ips.

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