Language: English
Published by Dark Mountain Project 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 1838416013 ISBN 13: 9781838416010
Seller: Earthlight Books, Walla Walla, WA, U.S.A.
First Edition
hardcover. Condition: Good. First Edition. Tight binding. Clean unmarked text and covers. Light dent to top of rear cover. Wear to all corners and head and tail of the spine. Pictures available upon request.Earthlight Books is a family owned and operated, independent bookstore serving Walla Walla, Washington since 1973.Thank you for supporting Earthlight Books and independent booksellers.
Language: English
Published by The Dark Mountain Project, 2021
ISBN 10: 1838416013 ISBN 13: 9781838416010
Seller: Smith Family Bookstore Downtown, Eugene, OR, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Autumn 2021 Issue. Hardcover, no dust jacket as published. Pages clean, unmarked, no writing. Binding tight. Very light wear to edges. Boards clean, unmarked, no stickers. 248 pages.
Language: English
Published by Dark Mountain Project, 2021
ISBN 10: 1838416013 ISBN 13: 9781838416010
Seller: RightWayUp Books, Woodbridge, SUFFO, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dark Mountain. Abyss. Autumn 2021. The Dark Mountain Project, 2021. Hardback, Fine. Illustrated boards. Binding strong and tight. 242pp., colour and b/w illustrations. Contents clean and bright. Our twentieth book brings an uncivilised eye to the mindset of extractivism. ark Mountain: Issue 20 ABYSS delves deep into civilisation's plunder of Earth. This all-colour strikingly illustrated issue reveals the hidden assault behind our technocratic lifestyle: on mountains, on trees, water, creatures and human beings, as extractvism's insatiable drive for natural resources fuels a seemingly endless expansion in consumption. But this book also asks: how do we remain fully human while so much around us is being destroyed, especially as we (at least, some of us) enjoy so many of the material benefits that devastation brings? The fiction and poetry in this book navigate this tricky terrain, from Claire Wahmanholm's haunting depictions of glaciers melting on the page to Tacey Atsitty's wrenching depiction of the poisoned water supplies of the Diné in the American Southwest. Meanwhile, the art confronts us with the real cost of human interference: beginning with Lawrence Gipe's stunning cover of a Siberian diamond mine, and ending with Aboriginal artist Betty Muffler's post-nuclear work, Healing Country, that shows the scale and beauty of the Earth repair required. RightWayUp Books aims to provide accurate and detailed descriptions. All images are of the actual book for sale - no stock images are ever used. Thank you for looking at this listing.