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My sci-fi novel about recreating an extinct species is becoming a reality - but even if we can, should we? | James Bradley

My sci-fi novel about recreating an extinct species is becoming a reality - but even if we can, should we? | James Bradley
theguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Let s talk novels about ecology, climate change | Borneo Bulletin Online

Let s talk novels about ecology, climate change | Borneo Bulletin Online
borneobulletin.com.bn - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from borneobulletin.com.bn Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Gary K Wolfe Reviews The Impossible Resurrection of Grief by Octavia Cade

Gary K Wolfe Reviews The Impossible Resurrection of Grief by Octavia Cade
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Ghost Species: In Conversation with James Bradley

Ghost Species: In Conversation with James Bradley James Bradley on the power of speculation in storytelling, for our Sydney Writers Festival coverage. The resurrection of the extinct gives James Bradley’s latest novel Ghost Species its title. An introspective tale of connection and loss, the novel ruminates on man’s relationship with nature after scientist Kate Larkin is caught up in a covert project to bring back the Neanderthals in the midst of climate catastrophe. James Bradley is an award-winning author and critic. An Honorary Associate of the Sydney Environment Institute, he is also a prominent voice in our current climate change discourse, having written various non-fiction articles and essays about the issue.

The Year in Review 2020 by Ian Mond

Ian Mond Several things kept me sane over the last 12 months. My family, the privilege of having a job while in lockdown, the Backlisted and Coode Street podcasts (particularly Coode Street‘s “10 minutes with” series), and the books I read. Yes, there were times in 2020 where I struggled to read more than a handful of pages, but the novels, novel­las, and collections I did complete (47 of which I reviewed for Locus) were some of the best books I’ve read in the last decade. My favourite work of 2020, the book I know I will return to again and again until the pages are dog-eared and the spine has cracked, is Robert Shearman’s three-volume, 1,700-page, magnum opus

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