Quickening

Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth

English language

Published July 3, 2023 by Milkweed Editions.

ISBN:
978-1-57131-396-6
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An astonishing, vital book about Antarctica, climate change, and motherhood from the author of Rising, finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction.

In 2019, fifty-seven scientists and crew set out onboard the Nathaniel B. Palmer. Their destination: Thwaites Glacier. Their goal: to learn as much as possible about this mysterious place, never before visited by humans, and believed to be both rapidly deteriorating and capable of making a catastrophic impact on global sea-level rise.

In The Quickening, Elizabeth Rush documents their voyage, offering the sublime—seeing an iceberg for the first time; the staggering waves of the Drake Passage; the torqued, unfamiliar contours of Thwaites—alongside the workaday moments of this groundbreaking expedition. A ping-pong tournament at sea. Long hours in the lab. All the effort that goes into caring for and protecting human life in a place that is inhospitable to it. Along the way, she takes readers …

2 editions

reviewed Quickening by Elizabeth Rush

pondering the future at the edge of melting ice

No rating

This book addresses parenthood and the climate crisis - more specifically, the choice to have children given the current state of the world. As I started the book, I wasn't sure about Rush's ability to link these two narrative threads (discussions of birth stories alongside her account of her own trip to Antarctica to see the Thwaites glacier with a group of scientists). But it does come together in ways I didn't expect (and in ways I think Rush didn't even expect). There are some moments of overwrought prose but overall the book is worth a read. Climate literature can be bleak, and that happens somewhat in this text, but it's not only bleak.