Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Winters
Edited by Sarena Ulibarri. World Weaver, $15.95 trade paper (320p) ISBN 978-1-7322546-8-8
This thought-provoking follow-up to 2018’s Solarpunk Summers brings together 17 diverse “solarpunk” tales, defined by Ulibarri as “optimistic climate fiction, depicting futures in which we have mitigated the worst effects of climate change, or adapted to the changes we can no longer prevent.” Each of these stories features a wintry, inhospitable setting occupied by tenacious survivors and innovators, and an emphasis on LGBTQ representation and female empowerment runs through each of these visions for more progressive futures. An Inuit scientist works to save narwhals after an oil rig explosion threatens their migration in Jennifer Lee Rossman’s “Oil and Ivory.” Thomas Badlan’s “Orchidae” follows a horticulturalist’s attempts to find space for her beloved orchids in a government-run greenhouse focused on growing crops to rebuild the human population. In Sarah Van Goethem’s “The Healing,” an ailing woman learns that her illness is inextricably linked to the bioengineered living city she cares for. Though this anthology achieves its goal of conjuring myriad ways humanity might thrive on a permanently altered planet, few of the individual stories stand out. Still, readers will take comfort in this wide range of snowy, hopeful tales. (Jan.)
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Reviewed on: 11/07/2019
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror