Human/Nature: Jane Rawson in Conversation

Human/Nature: Jane Rawson in Conversation

Join us for a conversation between Jane Rawson and James Whitmore discussing Jane's new book, Human/Nature.

333 followers
By The Sun Bookshop
333 followers
12.7k attendees hosted 📈

Date and time

Thursday, May 1 · 6:30 - 8:30pm AEST

Location

The Younger Sun

26 Murray Street Yarraville, VIC 3013 Australia

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

Join us for a conversation between Jane Rawson and James Whitmore discussing Jane's new book, Human/Nature.

Several years ago, Jane Rawson packed up her beloved inner-city home and moved to the bush. Scared about what climate change would do to the big city, and keen to meet more animals, she found a new home in a cottage in the Huon Valley. But in a place where nature never really leaves you alone, she had to confront her uncomfortable relationship with the outdoors.

A lyrical work of creative nonfiction, Human/Nature is an exploration of how and why we think about the natural world the way we do. If you've ever asked yourself whether humans are ruining nature, whether there's a better way for us to belong, or whether it's possible to love both the environment and your cat, you're not alone. This exquisite, contemplative book is for anyone who has ever wondered where they fit in the natural world.


Jane Rawson is the author of novels A History of Dreams, From the Wreck and A Wrong Turn at the Office of Unmade Lists, a novella, Formaldehyde, and, with James Whitmore, the non-fiction book The Handbook: Surviving & Living with Climate Change. You can read her essays in Living with the Anthropocene; Fire, Flood, Plague; and Reading Like an Australian Writer. She is the managing editor at Island magazine and lives in south-east Lutruwita/Tasmania.

James Whitmore is a writer, journalist and editor. He is the co-author with Jane Rawson of the critically-acclaimed non-fiction book about climate change adaptation, The Handbook: Surviving and Living with Climate Change.

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333 followers
12.7k attendees hosted