Learning to Live in the Dark: Essays in a Time of Catastrophe

Pre-Order   Ships Jun 24, 2025
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world
Product Details
Price
$18.95  $17.62
Publisher
Haymarket Books
Publish Date
Pages
180
Dimensions
0.0 X 0.0 X 0.0 inches | 0.0 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9798888903759

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.

Become an affiliate
About the Author
Wen Stephenson is a veteran journalist, essayist, and climate-justice activist. A correspondent for The Nation and frequent contributor to The Baffler, he is the author previously of What We're Fighting for Now Is Each Other (2015), about the pivotal early years of the U.S. climate justice movement. He has written for many publications, including The Atlantic, Slate, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Los Angeles Review of Books, and others.
Reviews

Praise for What We're Fighting for Now Is Each Other

"Wen Stephenson has written nothing less than a love letter to the student organizers, preachers, and frontline fighters struggling for climate justice across the United States. Together, these portraits coalesce into an impassioned call to action, offering a deep well of wisdom for any person coming to terms with the climate crisis."
--Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything

"This is a young, fascinating, in-motion movement, and Wen Stephenson captures it with grace and power. I learned a good deal about things I thought I already understood."
--Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org

"Impassioned, provocative, beautifully written."
--Mark Hertsgaard, Daily Beast

"In this harrowing, compelling call to action, Stephenson argues for radicalism, for a moral and even spiritual awakening similar to what fueled 19th century abolitionism."
--Kate Tuttle, Boston Globe

"Thoughtful and self-aware...Stephenson grapples with the existential threat of environmental catastrophe by turning his gaze outward, onto the foot soldiers of the young and growing climate justice movement."
--Chris Bentley, Chicago Tribune

"At its heart, this book is about a transformative social movement that is desperately needed and might just already be here."
--Caroline Selle, Orion

"Readers will feel that they've traveled along with Stephenson and will likely be as transformed as he was as they think about what they might contribute to the environmental movement."
--Booklist

"Impassioned, provocative, beautifully written...The great value of the book, as well as its great risk, is that it forces each of us to ask: what am I doing about the train that's barreling down the tracks towards me, my loved ones, and all we hold dear?"
--The Daily Beast

"In this powerful treatise, Wen Stephenson chronicles the convergence of climate activism and human rights struggles in frontline communities viewed through a climate justice lens. He convincingly presents climate change as the definitive global environmental justice issue of our day."
--Robert D. Bullard, author of Dumping in Dixie and co-author of The Wrong Complexion for Protection