This Week in History, Earth Day Inspires a Brief Glimpse into Literature and the Environment
Is there any day on the calendar that is not marked with "National Something Day"?
Sandwiched between those illustrious events is April 22nd’s humble National Earth Day.
Earth Day got its start in 1970 with Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin. Nelson hoped to provide unity to the grassroots efforts of the environmental movement by concentrating scattered efforts into a single nationwide demonstration of environmental concern and build ecological awareness. The effort did indeed meet with early success and in July 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency was established by executive order. Unlike National Chocolate Covered Cashews Day, it's hard to miss when Earth Day comes around with all the national and international events taking place.
Instead, here is a short selection of fiction and poetry that focuses in on nature, environmentalism, and our current post-apocalyptic obsession that is, at least in part, a product of our current concern over the state of our planet:
- Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver
- The Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey
- The Road by Cormac McCarthy
Poetry
- The Thunder Mutters by Alice Oswald
- The Ecopoetry Anthology edited by Ann Fisher-Wirth and Laura-Gray Street
And, of course, a selection pulled from the archives and current issue of HFR:
- Blue Sky White by Tessa Mellas in HFR42
- Evolution by Weston Cutter in HFR39
- Irretrievable Bird Species by Kevin Phan in HFR54
- Organic Computers by Seth Fried in HFR54
Do you know all about literature and the environment? Please feel free to educate us in the comments below!