We loved it all : a memory of life / Lydia Millet.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781324073659
- ISBN: 1324073659
- Physical Description: 254 pages ; 24 cm
- Edition: First Edition.
- Publisher: New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., [2024]
- Copyright: ©2024
Content descriptions
Formatted Contents Note: | When the perfect comes -- Mine eyes have seen the glory -- Ring the bells. |
Summary, etc.: | "A personal evocation of the glory of nature, our vexed position in the animal kingdom, and the difficulty of adoring what we destroy. Acclaimed novelist Lydia Millet's first work of nonfiction, We Loved It All, is a genre-defying tour de force that makes an impassioned argument for people to see their emotional and spiritual lives as infinitely dependent on the lives of nonhuman beings. Drawing on a quarter-century of experience as an advocate for endangered species at the Center for Biological Diversity, Millet offers intimate portraits of what she calls 'the others'--the extraordinary animals with whom we still share the world, along with those already lost. Humans, too, fill this book, as Millet touches on the lives of her world-traveling parents, fascinating partners and friends, and colorful relatives, from diplomats to nut farmers-all figures in the complex tapestry each of us weaves with the surrounding world. Written in the tradition of Annie Dillard or Robert Macfarlane, We Loved It All is an incantatory work that will appeal to anyone concerned about the future of life on earth--including our own"-- Provided by publisher. |
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Millet, Lydia, 1968- Authors, American > 20th century > Biography. Human-animal relationships. |
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Available copies
- 3 of 3 copies available at GRPL.
Holds
0 current holds with 3 total copies.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Madison Square | 813.54 M619w (Text) | 31307025800311 | Non Fiction | Available | - |
Main | 813.54 M619w (Text) | 31307025800329 | Non Fiction | Available | - |
Yankee Clipper | 813.54 M619w (Text) | 31307025800303 | Non Fiction | Available | - |

Publishers Weekly Review
We Loved It All : A Memory of Life
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Novelist Millet (Dinosaurs), also a creative director at the Center for Biological Diversity, ruminates in this profoundly affecting meditation on what it means to live through climate change. The narrative flows as if by instinct, moving from personal anecdotes to condemnations of corporate pollution to elegiac examinations of the havoc wrought by humans on the natural world, the organizing logic arising tacitly through suggestion and juxtaposition. In that vein, Millet's admission of how she used to believe systemic explanations constituted attempts to evade personal responsibility leads into a discussion of how the mid-1970s "Crying Indian" anti-litter campaign redirected culpability from the companies selling single-use plastic products to consumers. Contemplations of mortality recur throughout, as when Millet writes "I fear that my children one day... will be forced to endure the vanishing of much more than we ever did" and discusses how the last Tasmanian tiger died in 1936 after "she was locked out of the warm part of her enclosure overnight in a cold snap and froze." In scintillating prose, Millet makes a passionate case that humans must own up to their responsibilities to each other and the natural world ("Our coexistence has been, since forever, the backdrop of being. A dappled, shifting impression like the patterns of sun and shadows that fall across beds and ceilings and walls"). Mournful and piercingly beautiful, this will stick with readers long after they finish the last page. (Apr.)

BookList Review
We Loved It All : A Memory of Life
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Millet's (Dinosaurs, 2022) passion for the living world and concern over humanity's tragic role in destroying it is evident in her fiction. In her first work of nonfiction, she steps into the light, sharing personal stories and her informed observations of the extinction crisis as a conservationist long-associated with the Center for Biological Diversity. Millet contrasts humanity's violence toward animals with the central roles animals play in place-based, preindustrial cultures and every child's imagination. She considers the impact of Christianity on the West's elevating of humanity above the rest of nature, how those in the know long concealed the truth about climate change, and why we're failing to address planetary crises. Bewitched by our screens and filtered versions of reality, we are largely unversed in science and deluded in our assumptions about solutions to environmental disasters. And our priorities are skewed. Millet reports that we spent $490 million in 2018 on our pets' Halloween costumes, five times the funds budgeted to protect endangered species. In a recalibrating mix of memoir, facts, critique, and passages of elegiac beauty, Millet reflects on our dangerous muddlement and pins hope on the growing impact of one digital advance, our ability to more fully perceive "the awesome variety" of life on Earth in all its "grandeur" and "precariousness."