Islands of Abandonment

Life in the Post-Human Landscape

Islands of Abandonment
Cal Flyn
Our Price:
NZ$ 24.99
Paperback
h198 x 129mm - 384pg
23 Dec 2021 UK
International import eta 7-19 days
9780008329808
Out Of Stock
Currently no stock in-store, stock is sourced to your order
' Meticulous research, lyrical writing . . . A book that goes to the eeriest, most desolate places on Earth and finds hope' LOUISE GRAYThis is a book about abandoned places: exclusion zones, no man' s lands, ghost towns and post-industrial hinterlands - and what nature does when we' re not there to see it. Exploring some of the eeriest, most desolate places in the world, Cal Flyn asks: what happens after humans pick up and leave? Whether due to war or disaster, disease or economic decay, each extraordinary place visited in this book has been left to its own devices for decades. In this time, nature has been left to work unfettered - offering a glimpse of how abandoned land, even the most polluted regions of the world, might offer our best opportunities for environmental recovery. As part of a journey that takes her around the world, Cal Flyn travels to Chernobyl where she meets the scant handful of people who returned to their irradiated homes. She spends a night on an uninhabited Scottish island where feral cattle - descendants of a herd set loose in the 1970s - live wild. She visits a botanical garden lodged high in the cloud forests of Tanzania where exotic plants brought from opposite habitats grow alongside native trees - a show of how adaptable our ecosystems might prove. She visits a Caribbean ghost town where volcanic flows have subsumed the streets. She explores derelict buildings ruled by urban scavengers, sneaks through barbed wire, and walks a beach made of bones on the shore of a dwindling sea. By turns haunted and hopeful, Flyn' s luminous journey is pinned together with new ecological insights that map an answer to the big questions: what happens after we' re gone - and how far can our damage to nature be undone? Though these strange, forgotten landscapes represent some of the most damaged spots on the planet, they are also proof how much potential we have for biological diversity, regrowth and a chance at redemption.
PRAISE FOR ISLANDS OF ABANDONMENT' Filled with understanding and adventure, Islands of Abandonment is written with a beautiful attention to detail and a generous and imaginative frame of mind. The wonderful and surprising thing is how much reassurance and sense of possibility comes out of it at every turn. In that way, it is the most precious hymn to resilience' Adam Nicolson, winner of the 2018 Wainwright Prize' Through meticulous research, lyrical writing and a nose for finding the biological and human oddballs, she lets each place tell its own unique story . . . It made me think differently about nature, how it can survive in post-Apocalyptic environments, surprise the most eminent scientists and create beauty out of what we see as waste. Ultimately it shows how nature can heal a landscape broken by humans . . . At a time when writing about nature can be depressing, a book that goes to the most depressing places on Earth and finds hope is a revelation' Louise Gray, author of The Ethical Carnivore' Cal Flyn takes us on a mercurial expedition into the strange lands of human surrender. From toxic sludge to feral cattle to mutant fish to dystopian seas, out of the deathbeds of Lazarus we trip along, wide eyed. I cannot imagine a better guide. Thought-full, care-full, fascinating, poignant, mysterious, surreal, compelling, pace pitch-perfect. I could go on . . . and on. ' Keggie Carew, bestselling and prizewinning author of Dadland' Islands of Abandonment gives a unique and necessary take on our planetary crisis. In uncovering the stories of nature' s powers to rejuvenate and adapt even in the bleakest of circumstances, Cal Flyn spins a tale both tragic and shot through with hope, a finely crafted encapsulation of how it feels to live through these troubled times. Adam Weymouth, Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year 2019
Cal Flyn is a freelance journalist from the Highlands of Scotland. She has been a reporter for the Sunday Times and the Daily Telegraph, and a contributing editor at The Week magazine. She has been published in the New Statesman, The Observer, The Independent, Telegraph Magazine and FT Weekend, and won the 2013 Brandt/Independent on Sunday travel writing prize. THICKER THAN WATER is her first book.

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