The Bard reflects on sharing a bed, and why he wont go to Chelsea

“IT IS worse, much worse, than you think.” From its first sentence, The Uninhabitable Earth: A Story of the Future (Penguin Books) by US writer David Wallace-Wells is a deeply frightening read in chronicling the existential threat the climate crisis poses to humanity.
He notes that all the commitments made at the 2015 Paris UN climate summit by the 195 signatories would still mean a deadly 3.2°C of warming by 2100. If this isn’t terrifying enough, he explains that, as of 2018, “not a single major industrial nation was on track to fulfil the commitments it made in the Paris treaty.”
Answering Amitav Ghosh’s call for more fiction devoted to climate change, John Lanchester’s allegorical novel The Wall (Faber & Faber) considers how British society and politics could react to a climatic event called “the change.”

New releases from Steady Habits, Jeff Tweedy, and Tom Skinner

IAN SINCLAIR welcomes a lucid critique of a technology that reproduces and enables oppression, power, and environmental devastation

Reviews of new releases by Wednesday, Suede, and Nation of Language

Reviews of new releases by Jens Lekman, Big Thief, and Christian McBride Big Band