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Jeff VanderMeer's Favorite Climate Fiction Novels
Jeff VanderMeer's Favorite Climate Fiction Novels

New York Times

time07-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

Jeff VanderMeer's Favorite Climate Fiction Novels

As a writer who engages with climate issues in my fiction, I can be picky about such portrayals by other writers. I'm less interested in factual veracity than I am in the psychological truth of the lived-in moment: Fiction, I feel, is less suited to prediction or policy recommendations than it is to immersing readers in situations that show the reality of what an experience might feel like. While I've chosen purely speculative novels, the sobering reality is that we are living in the middle of a climate crisis now and thus any contemporary novel can grapple with it — say, a romance set in Houston where flooding swamps the city during a hurricane. Similarly, novels from and about the past can easily be re-contextualized as speaking to our current situation. While most would point to Cormac McCarthy's 'The Road' as climate fiction, you might just as easily look to his earlier novel 'Blood Meridian,' where the past seems like prologue to our present. The novels I recommend below — many of which I've championed in the past — may reassure simply by being so clearly fictional. I worry that, in the decades ahead, they will come to seem ever more realistic. But don't fret: Grim monotone makes for a boring novel, so there's a liveliness to my selections that I hope will challenge and reinvigorate readers — even amid the darkness. Private Rites This novel by the author of the widely acclaimed 'Our Wives Under the Sea' posits a near-future of constant rain and flooding in Britain. Against this backdrop, three sisters try to make sense of both the changing climate and the death of their father, a lauded architect whose creations include their family home. In the aftermath of his passing, the women — Isla, Irene and Agnes — return to the house, where their father's influence on not just the past but the present and future becomes clear in startling and evocative ways. The sui generis quality of 'Private Rites' comes from its beautiful rendering of mundane life and loss juxtaposed with a soggy, almost Gothic atmosphere. Read our review. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Abi Daré wins the inaugural Climate fiction prize
Abi Daré wins the inaugural Climate fiction prize

The Guardian

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Abi Daré wins the inaugural Climate fiction prize

Nigerian writer Abi Daré has won the inaugural Climate fiction prize for her novel And So I Roar, the follow-up to her bestselling debut The Girl with the Louding Voice. Daré was announced as the winner of the £10,000 prize at a ceremony in London on Wednesday evening. 'I am still slightly stunned but so honoured and thrilled,' she said. 'As a Black British-Nigerian woman, receiving this prize is a reminder that we do not need to wait for permission to step into global conversations or to contort our stories to fit a certain lens.' The Girl with the Louding Voice, published in 2020, tells the story of Adunni, a 14-year-old Nigerian girl who is forced to marry an older man before being sold into domestic servitude. And So I Roar begins with Adunni being excited to enrol in school in Lagos before being summoned back to her home village, Ikati. Daré said that she did not start the book intending to write about the climate crisis. 'I wanted to explore the lives of rural women and girls navigating inequality, silence and survival. But the deeper I went, the more I saw how environmental collapse bleeds into everything, how in many parts of rural Africa, climate injustice is more felt than understood,' she said. Author and judging chair Madeleine Bunting described And So I Roar as 'a book of real energy and passion which both horrifies and entertains', and a 'story of how the climate crisis can provoke social crisis, where often women and children are the victims. 'Despite the tragedy, Daré holds faith in the strength of individuals and relationships and her hopefulness leaves us inspired,' she added. Climate fiction 'is often rooted in the global north, so having a story set in Africa acknowledged like this means a great deal,' Daré said when she was shortlisted. 'Africa accounts for just 4% of global carbon emissions, yet faces some of the harshest effects of the climate crisis. A prize like this matters because it creates space for stories that show how deeply connected we all are and how fiction can open hearts where data alone might struggle.' Essex-based Daré was born in Lagos and studied law at the University of Wolverhampton, followed by a master's in international project management at Glasgow Caledonian University and a creative writing course at Birkbeck, University of London. In 2023, she set up The Louding Voice Foundation to provide educational scholarships to women and girls in Nigeria. Sign up to Bookmarks Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you after newsletter promotion 'I hope this moment encourages more writers, especially those from under-represented backgrounds, to explore the links between environment, identity and justice,' said Daré. Other books on the inaugural shortlist were The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley, Briefly Very Beautiful by Roz Dineen, The Morningside by Téa Obreht, and Orbital by Samantha Harvey, which won last year's Booker prize. Joining Bunting on this year's judging panel was the author Nicola Chester; climate activist and writer Tori Tsui; broadcaster and author David Lindo, also known as 'the urban birder'; and Hay festival sustainability director Andy Fryers.

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