Deadline: September 2, 2014 Submit to: editorial@creativetime.org Creative Time Reports has a call to artists for submissions. From the site: Reflecting the diversity of approaches and subjects undertaken by Creative Time Reports contributors, such pieces might take the form of photo-essays, videos, op-eds or poems (to name just a few […]
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Michael Rothenberg’s Punk Rockwell, Review by Mary Woodbury
Punk Rockwell, by Michael Rothenberg. Review by Mary Woodbury. According to Punk Rockwell‘s narrator Jeffrey Dagovich, poetry takes more than a lifetime to write. Dagovich is a poet (he announces at the beginning of the book), not a novelist. So why is he writing a novel? Slowly, it’s revealed that […]
Read MoreInterview with Emmi Itäranta, Memory of Water
Updated announcement: This novel is being made into a movie. I want to thank Emmi for this wonderful interview. My first pleasure was reading her book, Memory of Water. The novel takes place in the future after climate change has ravished economies and ecologies, and made fresh water scarce. When […]
Read MoreShort Story Writing Contest and Poets for Change 2014
Please join our nature community to discuss the contest or just to chat about climate change fiction! Note that this contest ended in the summer of 2014. This is a short story contest, not a poetry contest. 100,000 Poets for Change is a broad event that includes all types of […]
Read MoreJuly 1 (Deadline) – Call for Teaching Climate Change in Literature and Culture
The University of Oregon is calling for papers. From the site: If you would like to propose an original essay for this volume, please submit an abstract of approximately 300 words in which you describe the approach to teaching climate change that you would like to cover and an overview […]
Read MoreInterview with Sarah Holding of the SeaBEAN Trilogy
Thanks so much to Sarah Holding, author of the SeaBEAN Trilogy, for this wonderful interview. We are thrilled to talk to this awesome and talented writer who is very active in her community. Mary: I recently did a little study at Eco-fiction.com (now Dragonfly.eco) in a project where I categorized […]
Read MoreJune 14 – BIOSPHERE, Climate Change and People
From the BIOSPHERE website: When: Saturday 14 June, 7:45 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. Where: Watershed, Bristol, £5/£4 concessions Contact: Book online or telephone 0117 927 5100 The Festival of Nature presents an evening of spoken word performance featuring leading international writers and poets responding to the impact of climate change on […]
Read MoreCli-fi: a Short Essay on its Worlds and its Importance
Copyright and written by Gregers Andersen, sent in 2014 to this site for publication after a personal discussion with its author. Because it has been plagiarized by the same individual twice now, I ask that you please respect the copyright and contact Gregers Andersen if you wish to reprint this […]
Read MoreInterview with Lisa Devaney of In Ark: A Promise of Survival
Mary of Eco-fiction.com recently interviewed first-time novelist Lisa Devaney about her title In Ark: A Promise of Survival. Your book, In Ark: A Promise of Survival, is set in a future world. How did you imagine this future scenario? I’ve always been intrigued by what might happen in the future. […]
Read MoreDenialist and Skeptical Climate Change Novels
Climate change fiction seems to fall into one of two categories: 1) anthropogenic climate change fiction and b) other books about climate events but not necessarily climate change. Only two books have been reader-submitted that don’t fit into these categories. These books are listed below. Michael Chricton’s State of Fear […]
Read MoreMay 15 – Festival of Ideas, James Lovelock
See Festival of Ideas for more information. From the site: James Lovelock, who has been hailed as ‘the man who conceived the first wholly new way of looking at life on earth since Charles Darwin’ (Independent) and ‘the most profound scientific thinker of our time’ (Literary Review) continues, in his […]
Read MoreInterview with John Atcheson of A Being Darkly Wise
I had the pleasure of interviewing author John Atcheson after reading his novel A Being Darkly Wise, which is the first part of a trilogy. I read this novel in the course of less than a week, deeply hooked on what it was saying and where it was leading us. […]
Read MoreInterview with Tony White of Shackleton’s Man Goes South
Tony White Tony White is the author of Shackleton’s Man Goes South, which he wrote while a writer in residence at the Science Museum in London. 1. You were writer in residence at the Science Museum in London. Were you chosen among others to fulfill this writing position? Thank you […]
Read MoreInterview with Dr. Richard L. Bailey, Author of Stormy
Dr. Richard L. Bailey, author of novel Stormy, granted us an interview about his studies in climate change and his inspiration for writing this novel. 1. What led you to write this novel? I wrote the novel to create images in people’s minds of what is very likely to happen […]
Read MoreInterview with Peter Romilly, Author of 500 Parts Per Million
We were very fortunate to hear from Scottish author Peter Romilly, who wrote 500 Parts Per Million, a title we recently listed here. His sequel Cli-Fidelity will be published soon. Peter was an economics teacher and researcher for many years, but now writes novels. His fiction focuses on one of […]
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