The Year of No Summer
By (Author) Rachel Lebowitz
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
1st May 2018
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Anthologies: general
Gender studies: women and girls
General and world history
Literary essays
363.34950959865
Paperback
180
Width 133mm, Height 209mm
On April 10th, 1815, Indonesia's Mount Tambora erupted. Th e resulting build-up of ash in the stratosphere altered weather pat-terns and led, in 1816, to a year without summer. Instead, there were June snowstorms, food shortages, epidemics, inventions, and the proliferation of new cults and religious revivals.
Hauntingly meaningful in today's climate crisis, Lebowitz's lyric essay charts the events and eff ects of that apocalyptic year. Weaving together history, mythology, and memoir, The Year of No Summer ruminates on weather, war, and our search for God and meaning in times of disaster.
Praise for The Year of No Summer
"Disparate musings cohere into a lyrical meditation on violence, disaster, and humanity's yearning for solace." --Kirkus
"Follows in the footsteps of Claudia Rankine, Maggie Nelson, Daphne Marlatt, and Anne Carson...these essays cling to you long after you've read them, like lingering grains of wet, black sand." --Literary Review of Canada
"Lebowitz has found in this event a rich vein to mine in her impressionistic lyric essay, combining history, poetry, memoir, fable and storytelling to bring to the page her take on that apocalyptic time." --Toronto Star
"Darkly fascinating...Lebowitz highlights the parables, fables and myths we humans created in order to weave meaning into our lives and to which we return for comfort." --Atlantic Books Today
"Sobering." --Geist
"An inherently fascinating and informative read from first page to last...as thoughtful and thought-provoking as it is historically accurate and contemporarily relevant. Exceptionally well written, organized and presented." --Midwest Book Review
In these surprising, melancholic, and perceptive essays, Lebowitz finds a new form to witness, if not explain, the "still body--the still-fierce beating heart" of life on earth. --Canadian Literature
Praise for Rachel Lebowitz
"Lebowitz succeeds in extracting gems from the ambitious sweep of time and geography that the narrative embraces, and her presentation of her subject matter welcomes us into a strange and brutal world."--ARC Poetry
"Rachel Lebowitz is quickly becoming one of the best collagist poets in Canada today...What unfolds is a breathtaking, eerie and oddly beautiful look at the vicious underbelly of capitalism..."--Fiddlehead
Rachel Lebowitz, the author of Hannus (Pedlar Press, 2006), was shortlisted for the 2007 Roderick Haig-Brown Regional Prize (BC Book Prize) and the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction. She is also the author of Cottonopolis (Pedlar Press, 2013) and the co-author, with Zachariah Wells, of the children's picture book Anything But Hank! (Biblioasis, 2008, illustrated by Eric Orchard). She lives in Halifax, where she coordinates adult tutoring programs at her neighbourhood library.