
Description
2022 Art in Service to the Environment Award, Sierra Club Lone Star Chapter
Honorable Mention, 2022 Nonfiction Prize, Writers' League of Texas
Writers explore a city's relationship with chronic catastrophic flooding.
Shortly after Hurricane Harvey dumped a record 61 inches of rain on Houston in 2017, celebrated writer and Bayou City resident Lacy M. Johnson began collecting flood stories. Although these stories attested to the infinite variety of experience in America's most diverse city, they also pointed to a consistent question: What does catastrophic flooding reveal about this city, and what does it obscure?
More City than Water brings together essays, conversations, and personal narratives from climate scientists, marine ecologists, housing activists, urban planners, artists, poets, and historians as they reflect on the human geography of a region increasingly defined by flooding. Both a literary and a cartographic anthology, More City than Water features striking maps of Houston's floodplains, waterways, drainage systems, reservoirs, and inundated neighborhoods. Designed by University of Houston seniors from the Graphic Design program, each map, imaginative and precise, shifts our understanding of the flooding, the public's relationship to it, and the fraught reality of rebuilding. Evocative and unique, this is an atlas that uncovers the changing nature of living where the waters rise.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Texas Press |
Publish Date | July 05, 2022 |
Pages | 264 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781477325001 |
Dimensions | 10.2 X 7.4 X 1.1 inches | 2.6 pounds |
Reviews
More City Than Water is . . . compelling in many ways. It is academic yet personal, critical yet accessible, local yet global, pessimistic but not cynical, hopeful but not blindly. Its maps are immersive, allowing for extended meditation on existential questions related to human interconnectivity and our collective embeddedness as members of the environment rather than its masters. It will be a worthwhile addition to undergraduate syllabi and, more widely, to all those who care about Houston, climate change, and human rights.-- "H-Net Reviews (H-Water)" (1/1/2024 12:00:00 AM)
What makes the volume cohere so well and become more than the sum of its parts is a shared set of concerns about "our relationship to the land, to the future, to flooding, and to one another.-- "Southwestern Historical Quarterly" (7/6/2023 12:00:00 AM)
Never failing their orientation, the band of Houstonians featured in this book eloquently prove the power of the pen by offering a realistic climate poetics. If persistently and repeatedly applied to densely inhabited flood zones, atlases like this one may lead to a global wake-up call whose alarm may even reach the politicians.
-- "The Architect's Newspaper" (5/19/2023 12:00:00 AM)Excellent.-- "New York Times" (4/10/2023 12:00:00 AM)
This volume of stories by historians, housing activists, urban planners, climate scientists, marine biologists, poets, artists and longtime residents demonstrate resilience, creativity and even hope.-- "Austin American-Statesman" (11/3/2022 12:00:00 AM)
More City Than Water should serve as an inspiration for scholars working in the fields of digital and environmental humanities...This book points the way toward imagining 'environmental citizenship' as an essential practice in communities around the world.-- "Frugal Chariot" (7/12/2022 12:00:00 AM)
[More City Than Water] is beautiful, moving, and, most fundamentally, provocative--a collective portrait of a city defined for good and ill by its relationship to water.-- "Alta Journal" (6/20/2022 12:00:00 AM)
[A] strong anthology...the variety of voices and formats gives the work a sense of breadth. It adds up to a tough, thought-provoking depiction of the wreckage wrought by a changing climate.-- "Publishers Weekly" (4/21/2022 12:00:00 AM)
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