Not so much the state we're in as the mess we're getting into. Reports and stories from the frontiers of climate change and environmental (and human) catastrophe.
Ian Jack is a British journalist and writer who has edited the Independent on Sunday and the literary magazine Granta and now writes regularly for The Guardian.
Never heard of Granta before. It appears they are a 30 year old publishing house. I picked this up off a bookstall at this years Glastonbury festival for £3.50. I was struck by the pictures, which look like paintings. I discover they are the photographic work of Edward Burtynsky, titled 'Manufactured Landscapes'. Although all these photographs were taken here on planet Earth, many resemble some alien topography. Nickel Tailings at Sudbury, Ontario looks like the surface of Mars! Was that a river? It's red and could be a lava flow. Uranium Tailings at Elliot Lake, Ontario could be a post nuclear wasteland. All these full page colour photo's take the eye and brain a while to adjust into. Some are like abstract art works. The shock then follows that Mr H.Sapien & Co.Ltd are responsible. The reading matter is a collection of short stories and articles by various journalists and writers, a la Readers Digest. I had the impression that all the works were solely of an environmental nature, but not so. Some are travel biogs and there are a couple of accounts from the Iraq war. I'm still very spaced out and this collection has taken a few weeks to read, it's also now a month since I've visited the library!
I don't really like to eat seafood. My first choice would be the nasty, thoughtless pollution filters like shrimp and scallops. In a pinch, I will eat a mild, unfishy fish from a nasty, thoughtless "farm:" tilapia or catfish. Please don't order an actual fish that arrives at the table with one dead, gray eyeball staring up at the vintage chandeliers. Don't do that when you are out with me.
Highlights:returnreturnWayne McLennan: Rowing to Alaska (bro travel memoir)returnEdward Burtynsky: The Evidence of Man (photos)returnJames Hamilton-Paterson: Do Fish Feel Pain? (factual)returnJon McGregor: The First Punch (understated adultery fiction)returnJames Meek: With the Invaders (Iraq war journalism)
Just finished reading Granta 83- This Overheating World. An apt issue in these times. "Midsummer in April" by Maarten 't Hart was undoubtedly the best. "The Weather in Mongolia" by Phillip Marsden and "Rowing to Alaska" by Wayne McLennan were also good pieces.