Philip Mingay is Associate Professor of English at The King's University in Edmonton, Alberta, where he teaches postcolonial and Canadian literature, literary theory, and film. His scholarship focuses on the relationship between visual arts and literature. Michael Ferber is Dean of the Leder School of Business at The King's University in Edmonton, Alberta, where he teaches courses in business, environmental studies, and geography. His scholarship and writing explore the intersections of social, environmental, and economic sustainability.
""Mingay and Ferber have assembled here a collection of much needed voices that help us think in newly constructive ways about the state of our world. These diverse voices reclaim the lost liturgy of lament to take us past the simple emotional response of grief to the complexity of heart-rending engagement with our current environmental realities, ultimately moving us toward actions that result in the hope of healing."" --Grant Casady, Professor of Biology, Whitworth University ""An honest companion for anyone seeking to live faithfully in a wounded world. By pairing poems with reflections, Climate of Lament gives language to ecological grief and invites us into lament as both spiritual practice and public witness. With attentiveness to place, history, and justice, this collection speaks truth in love about what is happening to God's good world, confesses our complicity, and tunes us to the Spirit's call for faithful transformation."" --Ben Lowe, Executive Director, A Rocha USA ""Mingay and Ferber have assembled here a collection of much needed voices that help us think in newly constructive ways about the state of our world. These diverse voices reclaim the lost liturgy of lament to take us past the simple emotional response of grief to the complexity of heart-rending engagement with our current environmental realities, ultimately moving us toward actions that result in the hope of healing."" --Grant Casady, Professor of Biology, Whitworth University ""An honest companion for anyone seeking to live faithfully in a wounded world. By pairing poems with reflections, Climate of Lament gives language to ecological grief and invites us into lament as both spiritual practice and public witness. With attentiveness to place, history, and justice, this collection speaks truth in love about what is happening to God's good world, confesses our complicity, and tunes us to the Spirit's call for faithful transformation."" --Ben Lowe, Executive Director, A Rocha USA