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Green Ideas Slipcase
Green Ideas Slipcase
Apr 16, 2025 4:10 AM

Author:Greta Thunberg,Naomi Klein,Timothy Morton,George Monbiot,Bill McKibben,Amitav Ghosh,Tim Flannery,Terry Tempest Williams,Michael Pollan,Robin Wall Kimmerer,Dai Qing,Wangari Maathai,Jared Diamond,Wendell Berry,Edward O. Wilson,James Lovelock,Masanobu Fukuok

Green Ideas Slipcase

In twenty short books, Penguin brings you the classics of the environmental movement - now in one complete set

Over the past 75 years, a new canon has emerged. As humans have driven the living planet to the brink of collapse, visionary thinkers around the world have raised their voices to defend it. Their words have endured, becoming the classics that define the environmental movement today.

From art, literature, food and gardening, to technology, economics, politics and ethics, each of these short books deepens our sense of our place in nature; each is a seed from which a bold activism can grow. Together, they show the richness of environmental thought, and point the way to a fairer, saner, greener world.

Reviews

Insightful, frank and often moving... Though there is an underlying note of deep sadness, more often she writes with humour, a dose of self mockery and no small amount of courage.

—— Stephanie Merritt , Observer

[An] unsparing memoir... but Raven does much more than write an illness memoir... Raven explains in her introduction that Huntington's is not a linear disease but is experienced rather as a series of traumatic random-seeming assaults... it is that formless inevitability...that Raven enacts so powerfully here.

—— Kathryn Hughes , Guardian

A phenomenal achievement... [it] chronicles her journey into her illness in a way that is truthful, traumatic and brave.

—— The Times

Brutally candid... [a] devastating but remarkable testament of self-preservation.

—— Caroline Sanderson , The Bookseller, Editor's Choice

Charlotte Raven's Patient 1 is brilliant, terrifying, heart-breaking and laceratingly honest. She has the unflinching, unsentimental clarity of Rachel Cusk and the tender humour of John Bayley - but her style is utterly unique.

—— Peter Bradshaw

A searingly honest and important read. With neither pity nor sentimentality, Charlotte Raven captures the experience of living while losing one's mind. I cannot forget her words.

—— Dr Rachel Clarke

This is a deeply moving and profound memoir about facing the worst in life - and continuing. Everyone should read it.

—— Johann Hari

Patient 1 charts Charlotte Raven's bittersweet journey from her charmed, hedonist youth to an embattled future. Her charismatic character and scandalous humour is there on the page despite the creeping privations of Huntington's. With the kind of self-knowledge only accessible through suffering, she still manages to write powerfully and with beauty.

—— Cornelia Parker

A powerful account of living with Huntington's disease.

—— Katy Guest , Guardian

[A] chatty, irreverent memoir... a surprisingly pithy and entertaining read. The author's candour and self-depreciation make her all the more likeable.

—— UK Press Syndication

Considering this is essentially a book about a terminal illness, it's surprisingly entertaining.

—— Katie Wright , i

Raven is unsparing about her life now... she hasn't lost...her biting wit and mordant sense of humour.

—— Tablet

You'll . . . find lots to keep you engaged-provocative ideas, thinkers you've never heard of and a vast encyclopedia of cultural references.

—— USA Today

The venerable Maggie Nelson weighs in with the long-awaited follow-up to her masterpiece The Argonauts. On Freedom is a characteristically thoughtful and expansive work of cultural criticism that digs into this fraught topic through the lens of art, sex, drugs, and climate.

—— Chicago Review of Books

Nelson is so outrageously gifted a writer and thinker.

—— Washington Post (The Argonauts)

Transcendent.... very inspiring. She's an amazing writer.

—— Lorde , Irish Times (Bluets)

A writer who plays with prose and remakes the genre.

—— Hilton Als , New Yorker (The Argonauts)

Maggie Nelson... She's so much better than anything I've read for a long, long time.

—— Karl Ove Knausgaard , (Blues

The book that changed my life... it's just brilliant.

—— Sophie Mackintosh , Gardian (Bluets)

Always beguiling, her writing is powerful, incisive and so singular that it defies categorization ... raw, honest and urgent... [Nelson] always prompt me to see some aspect of life very differently.

—— The Observer (Bluets)

On Freedom is brave, sprawling, more troublesome than trouble-shooting - and in the spirit of Donna Haraway's Staying with the Trouble, quoted here by Nelson, that's just as it should be.

—— Emily Watkins , i

Maggie Nelson writes with a luminosity that is, upon opening any one of her books, immediately enlivening.

—— Ellen Peirson-Hagger , New Statesman

A patient and astringent analysis of what we owe each other and what we owe ourselves, and how to balance the two demands.

—— Adam Thirlwell , Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*

Beautiful and shocking, but ultimately so gloriously hopeful. The book we should all read as we emerge from this latest strangeness.

—— Paula Hawkins

I can't remember a book I've wanted to press into people's hands more this year than this resonant, immensely thoughtful look back at three generations of a farming family ... Managing to cram the whole modern history of British farming and nature into 270 beautifully written pages, this is a gem that's moving and immensely informative.

—— Andrew Holgate , The Sunday Times Nature Book of the Year

A rare and urgent book ... Its beauty is not only in the writing but in what is behind it: a gentle and wise sensibility that is alive to the human love affair with the land and yet also intimately cognisant of our collective and systematic cruelty towards it.

—— Hisham Matar

I think, genuinely, this is the best book I've read this year, and one of the most important books of recent years. It is about food and farming, and how we eat what we eat. It's about progress and nostalgia, without being prideful or mawkish, it's about families and tradition, and the passing of time. It made me simultaneously proud to be British, and sad for what we have become, but hopeful that we can change.

—— Adam Rutherford

James Rebanks combines the descriptive powers of a great novelist with the pragmatic wisdom of a farmer who has watched his world transformed. This is a profound and beautiful book about the land, and how we should live off it.

—— Ed Caesar

Through the eyes of James Rebanks as a grandson, son, and then father, we witness the tragic decline of traditional agriculture, and glimpse what we must now do to make it right again. As an evocation of British landscape past and present, it's up there with Cider With Rosie.

—— Joanna Blythman

A beautiful and important book.

—— Sadie Jones

English Pastoral is a work of art. It is nourishing and grounding to read ... this brave and beautiful book will shape hearts and minds.

—— Jane Clarke, author of When the Tree Falls

A wonderful, humane book told through the eyes of a man who has watched much vanish from his land, and now wants to put it back ... Moving and illuminating.

—— Benedict Macdonald, author of Rebirding

James Rebanks describes the life of a Lakeland working farmer from the inside with a unrivalled truth and eloquence

—— Tom Fort, author of Casting Shadows

Vivid, accessible, inspiring - a story about one man's emerging land ethic, and an appreciation of the old ways in modern times. A vital book for anybody who eats

—— Kathryn Aalto, author of Writing Wild

James Rebanks is a beautiful writer, in a unique position to describe the challenges currently being faced by farmers throughout the world. English Pastoral is a joy to read and extremely moving - a book which should be read by every citizen.

—— Patrick Holden, Sustainable Food Trust

Farming, unlike almost any other job, is bound up in a series of complex ropes that Rebanks captures in his own story so beautifully: family pressure and loyalty, ego, loneliness, and a special kind of peer pressure...English Pastoral is going to be the most important book published about our countryside in decades, if not a generation

—— Sarah Langford

A deeply personal account by a farmer of what has happened to farming in Britain. Everyone interested in food should read this compelling, informative, moving book

—— Jenny Linford

Rebanks is a rare find indeed: a Lake District farmer whose family have worked the land for 600 years, with a passion to save the countryside and an elegant prose style to engage even the most urban reader. He's refreshingly realistic about how farmed and wild landscapes can coexist and technology can be tamed. A story for us all.

—— Evening Standard, Best Books of Autumn 2020

Moving, thought-provoking and beautifully written.

—— James Holland

English Pastoral is one of the most captivating memoirs of recent years ...The traditional pastoral is about retreat into an imagined rural idyll, but this confronts very real environmental dilemmas. Like the best books, it gives you hope and new energy.

—— Amanda Craig , Guardian

James Rebanks has a sharp eye and a lyrical heart. His book is devastating, charting the murderous and unsustainable revolution in modern farming ... But it is also uplifting: Rebanks is determined to hang on to his Herdwicks, to keep producing food, and to bring back the curlews and butterflies and the soil fertility to his beloved fields. Truly a significant book for our time.

—— Daily Mail – Books of the Year

Lyrical and illuminating ... will fascinate city-dwellers and country-lovers alike.

—— Independent – 10 Best Non-Fiction Books of 2020

A lyrical account of Rebanks' childhood on the Lake District farm that he's made famous; an account of how he learned about stockmanship and community and the rhythms of the land from his father and grandfather. [...] His writing is properly Romantic, which is a high compliment [...] Rebanks is obviously a wonderful human as well as a splendid writer.

—— Charles Foster

A lament for lost traditions, a celebration of a way of living and a reminder that nature is 'finite and breakable.' Mr. Rebanks hits all the right notes and deserves to be heard

—— Wall Street Journal

The most important story, perfectly told

—— Amy Liptrot

Memorable, urgent, eloquent ... Rebanks speaks with blunt, unmatched authority. He is also a fine writer with descriptive power and a gift for characterisation ... English Pastoral may be the most passionate ecological corrective since Rachel Carson's Silent Spring

—— Caroline Fraser , New York Review of Books
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