This reminds me of When We Cease to Understand the World (2021) more than (say) James or the Saint of Bright Doors. Closest analogue is maybe The Mountain and the Sea, which also does Big Ideas from a slightly detached perspective 3/X
This reminds me of When We Cease to Understand the World (2021) more than (say) James or the Saint of Bright Doors. Closest analogue is maybe The Mountain and the Sea, which also does Big Ideas from a slightly detached perspective 3/X
Genuinely enjoying all the geoengineering. Also all the pointed jabs at market solutions and the core/periphery climate justice divide. His prognosis for India following the chapter 1 heatwave is interesting but I suspect it is incorrect 4/X