An end-of-the-world love story, an epic full of pathos and humor, asking what can be saved of our planet
Well, that’s about it for the story of planet Earth, poor Earth, reduced to not much more than a piece of burnt coal. But, as Deb Olin Unferth shows in her latest electrifying novel, life and love persist, even in the most unexpected, inhospitable places.
Two women meet on a beach of artificial sand. One was raised in a pod in the ocean and the other may or may not be a robot. Their loveor any loveseems so unlikely. Earth is severely depopulated. Some people have given up, gone off to Mars. Others pursue eternal life as digital code. And yet others, like Dylan and Melanie, are holdoutsand some of those holdouts are constructing a vast molecular collection in hopes that a future person may be alive to make a new Earth. Foolhardy? Misguided? Quixotic? Probably. But what can a human (or a robot) do?
By the end of Unferth’s wild, poetic, revelatory, and slyly philosophical novel, the reader has traveled to the very edges of the cosmos as a ‘soul globule’ and between grains of sand as a microscopic tardigrade. A slim book tackling big questions (is all matter conscious? will we tech ourselves into salvation, or out of existence?), Earth 7 is a poignant inquiry into death, mourning, and indefatigable life, the most exhilarating work to date by one of our most original and beloved writers.
Genre: Science Fiction
Well, that’s about it for the story of planet Earth, poor Earth, reduced to not much more than a piece of burnt coal. But, as Deb Olin Unferth shows in her latest electrifying novel, life and love persist, even in the most unexpected, inhospitable places.
Two women meet on a beach of artificial sand. One was raised in a pod in the ocean and the other may or may not be a robot. Their loveor any loveseems so unlikely. Earth is severely depopulated. Some people have given up, gone off to Mars. Others pursue eternal life as digital code. And yet others, like Dylan and Melanie, are holdoutsand some of those holdouts are constructing a vast molecular collection in hopes that a future person may be alive to make a new Earth. Foolhardy? Misguided? Quixotic? Probably. But what can a human (or a robot) do?
By the end of Unferth’s wild, poetic, revelatory, and slyly philosophical novel, the reader has traveled to the very edges of the cosmos as a ‘soul globule’ and between grains of sand as a microscopic tardigrade. A slim book tackling big questions (is all matter conscious? will we tech ourselves into salvation, or out of existence?), Earth 7 is a poignant inquiry into death, mourning, and indefatigable life, the most exhilarating work to date by one of our most original and beloved writers.
Genre: Science Fiction
Praise for this book
"An electric, hilarious, and harrowing story of fractured technological identities and interdimensional exile in a shattered future. With her signature absurd genius, Deb Olin Unferth has created a shocking and moving speculation that I suspect breaks new ground in climate fiction." - Jessica Anthony
"I'm a Deb Olin Unferth stan forever - she is the master of the exacting and luminous. Earth 7 is the friend you want after the end of the world. It will reinvigorate your love for our planet." - Marie-Helene Bertino
"Earth 7 is an epic sci-fi masterpiece and a love letter to the totally lush, and shockingly diverse, life-forms of our planet. I adore this book. Everyone who lives on planet Earth should read it." - Rita Bullwinkel
"What a remarkable book! Having recently tried and failed to write about climate change in Earth's far future myself, I know how hard a task Unferth has set for herself. Yet her story enfolds the reader like a dream - so much beauty, so much wisdom, such feats of imagination. I am in awe." - Karen Joy Fowler
"Deb Olin Unferth is one of my favorite writers, and Earth 7 confirms her talent for being one of the best storytellers working today. It is a brilliant feast of wisdom and imagination, virtuosic and urgent, full of humor and love. Don't miss this beautiful, strange novel!" - Brandon Hobson
"With humor and unmatched imagination, Deb Olin Unferth writes about humanity in all its facets - our destructiveness and our failures, but our capacity for love, too (however imperfect). Exhilarating and original." - Rachel Khong
"Is it a love story? A dystopian novel oddly suffused with brightness, tenderness, and philosophy? Is it sci-fi or realism? It's all of these things, and it's like no other book you've ever read, by a writer like no other." - Elizabeth McCracken
"Earth 7 has knocked me out of kilter in all sorts of strange and haunting and wonderful ways. A work of desperate and loving imagination that follows its own impulsive logic and treads where most of us fear to go. Terrifying and life-affirming all at the same dizzying time. Throw yourself into Deb Olin Unferth's world; you won't regret it." - Jon McGregor
"Earth 7 begins where most love stories would give up: with the world already gone. In the tradition of Ursula K. Le Guin, Unferth uses the machinery of speculative fiction to ask the oldest questions. . . . A heart-cracking, mind-expanding, and exhilarating novel." - Jonathan Miles
"Earth 7 is an elegy to the world we have now, already disappearing, and at the same time, it's a message in a bottle, an offering of hope for some far-off future. Intimate and wistful and hypnotic, full of rich detail and beautiful writing." - Charles Yu
"I'm a Deb Olin Unferth stan forever - she is the master of the exacting and luminous. Earth 7 is the friend you want after the end of the world. It will reinvigorate your love for our planet." - Marie-Helene Bertino
"Earth 7 is an epic sci-fi masterpiece and a love letter to the totally lush, and shockingly diverse, life-forms of our planet. I adore this book. Everyone who lives on planet Earth should read it." - Rita Bullwinkel
"What a remarkable book! Having recently tried and failed to write about climate change in Earth's far future myself, I know how hard a task Unferth has set for herself. Yet her story enfolds the reader like a dream - so much beauty, so much wisdom, such feats of imagination. I am in awe." - Karen Joy Fowler
"Deb Olin Unferth is one of my favorite writers, and Earth 7 confirms her talent for being one of the best storytellers working today. It is a brilliant feast of wisdom and imagination, virtuosic and urgent, full of humor and love. Don't miss this beautiful, strange novel!" - Brandon Hobson
"With humor and unmatched imagination, Deb Olin Unferth writes about humanity in all its facets - our destructiveness and our failures, but our capacity for love, too (however imperfect). Exhilarating and original." - Rachel Khong
"Is it a love story? A dystopian novel oddly suffused with brightness, tenderness, and philosophy? Is it sci-fi or realism? It's all of these things, and it's like no other book you've ever read, by a writer like no other." - Elizabeth McCracken
"Earth 7 has knocked me out of kilter in all sorts of strange and haunting and wonderful ways. A work of desperate and loving imagination that follows its own impulsive logic and treads where most of us fear to go. Terrifying and life-affirming all at the same dizzying time. Throw yourself into Deb Olin Unferth's world; you won't regret it." - Jon McGregor
"Earth 7 begins where most love stories would give up: with the world already gone. In the tradition of Ursula K. Le Guin, Unferth uses the machinery of speculative fiction to ask the oldest questions. . . . A heart-cracking, mind-expanding, and exhilarating novel." - Jonathan Miles
"Earth 7 is an elegy to the world we have now, already disappearing, and at the same time, it's a message in a bottle, an offering of hope for some far-off future. Intimate and wistful and hypnotic, full of rich detail and beautiful writing." - Charles Yu
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