Rebecca Solnitis the author of more than twenty books, includingOrwell's Roses,Hope in the Dark,Men Explain Things to Me,A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster, andA Field Guide to Getting Lost. A longtime climate and human rights activist, she serves on the boards of Oil Change International and Third Act.
“In this remarkably lucid and fluent chronicle of social change over the last six decades or so, the course of her lifetime, she traces profound shifts in perceptions and convictions regarding race, gender, equality, and the environment. Confirming that we’re in the midst of a massive backlash as the right attempts to undo everything from the promise of renewable energy to efforts at achieving diversity, equity, and inclusion, Solnit argues that this reaction is due to already profound and ultimately unstoppable societal transformations. Solnit’s holistic anatomy of the dynamics of change is precise, compelling, and deeply clarifying.” —Donna Seaman, ALA Booklist Starred Review “A convincing vision of a brighter future. A climate and human rights activist, Solnit examines the insidious consequences of the ideology of isolation, to which she attributes current virulent efforts at suppression, fear of diversity, and denigration of ideas considered “woke.” Instead, she offers persuasive evidence of the acknowledgment of the connection of humans to wilderness, nature, and one another: local groups cleaning up salmon streams and watching the fish return; an energy revolution focused on renewables; the impact of anti-racist, feminist, immigrant, disability-rights, and queer-rights movements; the emergence of environmental awareness in creating laws and systems to protect the natural world; the shift to decolonization globally.” —Kirkus Starred Review “Rebecca Solnit’s clearsighted, inspiring essay collection celebrates the achievements of the progressive movement and poses a hopeful vision of the future.” —Foreword Reviews “Solnit takes the long view on the past 65 years of social progress. In her telling, the current rise of authoritarianism is the dying gasp of an old world order, and we are on the precipice of living in a multicultural and interconnected world.” —The New York Times “Explaining that change is “invisible” over longer stretches of time, once the “baseline” has been forgotten, the author recaps the significant social advancements of the past several decades, including civil rights, feminism, LGBTQ+ equality, and the environmental movement.” —Publishers Weekly