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Marc DiPaolo, author of Fire and Snow: Climate Fiction from the Inklings to Game of Thrones
"Sometimes it's only in retrospect that we can recognize patterns that now seem self-evident. In this well-chosen collection, William Gillard has assembled a provocative collection of stories that - from our own precarious perch on the edge of climate catastrophe - now seem eerily prophetic. A richly rewarding compilation for anyone interested in the powerful legacy of climate change on the development of literature and human culture."
McKay Jenkins, Author of Food Fight: GMOs and the Future of the American Diet
"Bill Gillard recognizes that writers have long been aware of anthropogenic climate change, as demonstrated through the voices in this anthology. This important intervention helps scholars and readers recognize that climate fiction has a deep archive of possibilities to inspire action."
Phoebe Wagner, co-editor of Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation
"With commendable originality, Gillard's Routledge Anthology of Climate Fiction seeks to extend our understanding of climate fiction, or 'cli-fi', back to the late nineteenth century. The scholarly consensus on cli-fi conventionally dates the sub-genre from the late twentieth century, but Gillard's collection makes it interestingly contemporaneous with earlier concerns about industrial pollution and with the early history of modernism, along lines previously argued in his co-authored Speculative Modernism (2021). There is a customary nod to the story of Noah in Genesis and less customary nods to Byron and Poe. But the main focus is on Anglo-American fiction during the period 1880-1940, with passing inclusions from Italy, Chile and France (although oddly not from Jules Verne). The collection will prove invaluable to those working on cli-fi, both teachers and students, but it's to be hoped that subsequent volumes will bring us up to date and also focus on other national fictions, perhaps most importantly the French."
Andrew Milner, Author of Locating Science Fiction (2012), Science Fiction and Climate Change (2020) and Science Fiction and Narrative Form (2023)