![]() ![]() As they change, so does the planet-floods, droughts, wildfires, animal extinction, and mysterious “horrors in Chicago” all occur with greater intensity and frequency as climate change wreaks havoc all over the Earth. In Clade, we follow one family and their closest friends over the course of several generations. He’s the author of three other novels and a book of poetry, as well as the editor of The Penguin Book of the Ocean. Case in point: James Bradley, an Australian novelist and literary critic, whose novel Clade hit shelves last month. ![]() Writers of climate fiction also come from around the globe. Not only will the meeting potentially affect international policy, it’ll serve as an important reminder that climate change-and any effort to mitigate it-is a global phenomenon. Next month, leaders from around the world will convene in Bonn, Germany for the annual United Nations conference on climate change. ![]() ![]() Burning Worlds is Amy Brady’s monthly column dedicated to examining trends in climate change fiction, or “cli-fi,” in partnership with Yale Climate Connections. ![]()
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