Second Nature, Nathaniel Rich
Second Nature, Nathaniel Rich
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Second Nature
Scenes from a World Remade

Author: Nathaniel Rich

Narrator: John Pirhalla

Unabridged: 9 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/30/2021


Synopsis

From the author of Losing Earth, a beautifully told exploration of our post-natural world that points the way to a new mode of ecological writing.

We live at a time in which scientists race to reanimate extinct beasts, our most essential ecosystems require monumental engineering projects to survive, chicken breasts grow in test tubes, and multinational corporations conspire to poison the blood of every living creature. No rock, leaf, or cubic foot of air on Earth has escaped humanity's clumsy signature. The old distinctions—between natural and artificial, dystopia and utopia, science fiction and science fact—have blurred, losing all meaning. We inhabit an uncanny landscape of our own creation.

In Second Nature, ordinary people make desperate efforts to preserve their humanity in a world that seems increasingly alien. Their stories—obsessive, intimate, and deeply reported—point the way to a new kind of environmental literature, in which dramatic narrative helps us to understand our place in a reality that resembles nothing human beings have known.

From Odds Against Tomorrow to Losing Earth to the film Dark Waters (adapted from the first chapter of this book), Nathaniel Rich’s stories have come to define the way we think of contemporary ecological narrative. In Second Nature, he asks what it means to live in an era of terrible responsibility. The question is no longer, How do we return to the world that we’ve lost? It is, What world do we want to create in its place?

A Macmillan Audio production from MCD

About Nathaniel Rich

Nathaniel Rich is the author of Losing Earth: A Recent History, which received awards from the Society of Environmental Journalists and the American Institute of Physicists and was a finalist for the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award; and the novels King Zeno, Odds Against Tomorrow, and The Mayor’s Tongue. He is a writer at large for The New York Times Magazine and a regular contributor to The Atlantic, Harper's, and The New York Review of Books. Rich lives in New Orleans.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jan on August 24, 2020

I feel certain that I read the first pages, the "Prologue," long ago. They were enough for me to order a copy, which I forgot I possessed until I'd ordered another and reread those pages. Incredible! Wilder does what few writers have attempted: She has created a situation on a planet of castaways and......more

Goodreads review by Jenny on January 24, 2023

I was slow getting into this book but at some point in the middle it became very magical and then also foreboding thinking about human beings evolving or devolving and changing in strange alien landscapes. There is a realism to how she writes her characters that struck me as interesting. At first gl......more

Goodreads review by Nathan on June 27, 2021

Worldbuilding is not what I look at first in my specfic, but this setting makes for an extremely interesting mainspring: The survivors of a human crash landing on an uncharted world create their own society over the next couple of hundred years, all the while wishing they had more than just the lege......more

Goodreads review by Sherrill on March 11, 2014

Written in 1982. 'When I went on retreat in the sea of Ulster I found a legendary creature, a minmer or nipper. It was long as my middle foot nail and had black skin.' The Vail. Years ago a spaceship crashed on this planet. There were some survivors, who struggled along as best they could, and some pe......more