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Fire

A message from the edge of climate catastrophe

Margi Prideaux

Fire
Fire is a love letter to a small community who has a message for the world. The time for hollow words and targets and plans is over. Communities need to take back their control and consciously adapt to living in a world with more apocalyptic wildfires, killer heat domes, catastrophic rain bombs, lethal floods and mudslides, deadly droughts, and violent sandstorms.

Across the world people have high expectations their governments will adapt to the changing climate. The media and politicians often shorthand this action to 'net zero' but limiting action to emissions alone fatally misses what people want. Yes, people, from all walks of life, need a resilient future secured for our children's children, but they also want their communities to be safe from disaster right now. Net zero does not provide that present-tense safety. Net zero is only about preventing things from getting exponentially worse.

In 2019 and 2020 fires ripped across Kangaroo Island's iconic landscape in the catastrophic continent-wide climate event known as Black Summer. In that fatal season, wildfire destroyed a globally unprecedented percentage of continental forest biome. Across Australia 190,000 square kilometres were decimated, the lives of 33 people tragically lost, over 3,000 houses destroyed, and more than 100,000 farm animals and 1 billion native animals wiped out. Confronted by a hellfire that burned too hot to contain, even the oldest souls within Kangaroo Island's small community gravely whispered, 'never before'.

The real strength of author and academic Margi Prideaux's book, Fire: A message from the edge of climate catastrophe, is that it not only captures the emotional journey she and her husband experienced after losing their home and farm during that tragic season, but also chronicles a community's journey through trauma and climate grief; from disaster into stark awareness of climate chaos; from climate apathy to front-line witnesses of a global climate crisis. A journey billions more people will suffer as climate disasters escalate.

Fire is essential reading for anyone interested not just in humanity's future but our present. 'We have experienced the beginning of the climate change curve and we cannot bequeath this hell to tomorrow.'

Praise for Fire
'Fire is brilliant and powerful and deeply, deeply moving. It is not a book I will easily forget. And I suspect that as the years of climate collapse roll on, I will think of and turn to it many times.' - Stephen Harrod, Earth Grief: The Journey Into and Through Ecological Loss

'An expression of despair, anger and bewilderment. The only way forward is not with more failed government policies, but through resolve and action at the grass-roots community level.' - Alan Atkinson, Three Weeks in Bali

'An authentic recollection of disaster recovery everyone needs to read in order to create change together for a safer future.' - Sabrina Davis, Humans of Kangaroo Island

'Fire is a powerful and important book.' - Sophie Cunningham, Saturday Paper

Margi Prideaux has written about wildlife, international politics, and law almost every day for the past thirty years. As an international negotiator and independent academic, with a Ph.D in wildlife policy and law, her words have been tuned to inform policy audiences in over twenty different international conservation processes. She has five books and her shorter musings are regularly published in Dark Mountain, openDemocracy, Live Encounters, Wildlife Articles, AlterNet, Global Policy, and Ecologist. Having lived and lost in Australia’s 2020 Black Summer fires, she now writes because she believes time has run out.
Details
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Format Paperback
Size 226 x 150 mm
ISBN 9781925856569
Extent 364 pages
Price: AU$34.95 including GST
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