Description

Written with clarity, tenacity, humor, and warmth, A Hundred Little Pieces on the End of the World attempts to find tolerable ethical positions in the face of barely tolerable events—and the real possibility of an intolerable future. It is a compelling, surprising, disturbing, and highly literate work of reportage and contemplation. It is both a collection of gentle-spirited wisdom and a rumination on ruin, as if distilled in equal measure from the spirits of Norman Maclean’s A River Runs Through It and Cormac McCarthy’s The Road.

Through these ten essays, each further broken into ten smaller pieces, Rember examines the practical and ethical dilemmas of climate change, population, resource depletion, and mass extinction. At the same time, he never forgets those improbable connections between human beings that lead to moments of joy, empathy, and grace.

About the author(s)

John Rember is the author of Sudden Death, Over Time; Coyote in the Mountains and Other Stories; Cheerleaders from Gomorrah: Tales from the Lycra Archipelago; and Traplines: Coming Home to Sawtooth Valley. He and his wife, Julie, live in the Sawtooth Valley of Idaho.

Reviews

Thought-provoking, reflective, and forthright.--Jeremy Garber, bookseller at Powell's, Portland, in Literary Hub

John Rember's new book spans his upbringing in the wilderness of Idaho's Sawtooth Valley, his work as a professor of literature and ski instructor, and his return to the valley refuge where he bears witness to a world in fall with a wry wit, sharp observation, and a style that meets the urgency of our times.--The Dark Mountain Project

John Rember's new book spans his upbringing in the wilderness of Idaho's Sawtooth Valley, his work as a professor of literature and ski instructor, and his return to the valley refuge where he bears witness to a world in fall with a wry wit, sharp observation, and a style that meets the urgency of our times.--The Dark Mountain Project

Rember's sometimes dark, sometimes humorous book of reflections dispenses hard-earned wisdom on a world in crisis.--Publishers Weekly

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