Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Writings on climate change will give you some hope

- By Eric Roston

“All We Can Save” is basically a community bound between two covers, and a gift to any who wishes to join in.

Before 2020 collapses under its own weight, it’s worth noting some of the positive things that came out of the year. A book that was published this fall, “All We Can Save,” is something that will help us navigate a nerve-wracking future.

Against a backdrop of the trickling, everyday dross of internet life — not to mention destabiliz­ing pandemic and populism around us — this book is what the late short-story author Raymond Carver might have called “a small good thing.”

“All We Can Save” is a collection of essays, memories, poems and even advice memos written by 60 women, most enmeshed profession­ally one way or another with climate change — scientists, researcher­s, activists, journalist­s, former government officials, writers and more.

A fine expression of the project comes in one of many interstiti­al quotations dropped in-between the short essays. It’s a statement from Heather McGhee, a political commentato­r, author and board chair of the group Color of Change: “Inequality and climate change are the twin challenges of our time, and more democracy is the answer to both.”

Many readers are used to climate change as a business, investment, policy, technology or science story. “All We Can Save” complement­s that approach with something sorely missing: shared interior monologues about the empathy that binds people to each other and to history.

The contributi­ons are each about what it feels like to be a descendant,

child, mother, friend, colleague, leader or ancestor at the onset of the what should probably be called obvious climate change. The book’s title comes from a line by the late poet Adrienne Rich: “My heart is moved by all I cannot save.”

It’s refreshing to hear the expertise of, to cite one example, Indigenous people applied directly to modern questions of governing, business, agricultur­e and more. The world’s largest companies have been tripping over each other for 15 years to claim the mantle of “sustainabi­lity,” when the oldest human communitie­s have quietly been experts on it for millennia.

“The great contributi­on that Indigenous peoples may be able to make at this time is to continue providing the world with living models of sustainabi­lity that are rooted in ancient wisdom,” writes Sherri Mitchell Weh’na Ha’mu Kwasset. Half a book later, Régine Clément, the head of Creo Syndicate, an investing group for rich families, bridges the old and new by asking, “How can we use the mechanics of capitalism as it currently exists to transform it?”

There are hat-tips to national politician­s, any of which shrinks in substance to, say, former U.S. regional Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor Heather McTeer Toney’s account of how when doors close and meetings start, “there was no room for petty division.”

There are a couple of repetition­s of names and ideas, which can be interprete­d charitably as happy shoutouts to shared parts of a community. One contributo­r, former U.S. EPA administra­tor Gina McCarthy, was recently named to become President-elect Joe Biden’s national climate adviser.

Books are finite, and even a work of 60 contributo­rs running more than 400 pages leaves out voices. Editors Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine Wilkinson, who respective­ly hold doctorates in marine biology, and geography and environmen­t, have turned their book into an All We Can Save Project, with a new newsletter, to extend their ideas and work on behalf of women climate leaders.

“All We Can Save” is basically a community bound between two covers, and a gift to any who wishes to join in. Johnson and Wilkinson have set a high bar, but this movement-forging book format is replicable by anyone else who also

 ??  ?? ‘All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis’
Edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson & Katharine Wilkinson; One World, 448
‘All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis’ Edited by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson & Katharine Wilkinson; One World, 448

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