M we tend to have the story of apocalypse and we have the story. of peaches and rainbows, whether it's the green deal or perfect getting ther prices right. But yours really doesn't. It really gives us a much more complex picture. And so love to hear you kind of reflect a bit on that, and why the novel is such a good form for taking this on. I think i notice now reading it, because i assemble these things in a semi conscious, instinctual state, what orders should they come in? Ordering information, where you want everything to hit the brain at once, but you have to do it one sentence at a time. That's a proposition
Kim Stanley Robinson on science fiction, climate crisis, Marxism, geo-engineering, political violence, green Keynesianism, and a lot more. Interviewed by guest host Daniel Aldana Cohen, who read 11 of Robinson’s books during the pandemic quarantine, running from Red Mars through The Ministry for the Future.
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