Running for Your Life: Rachel Carson on My Mind

Okay. Here’s to Rachel Carson. “Silent Spring” Lady. Time to shout out loud.

It was “Silent” in 1960 (I was five years old) when her startingly beautifully written and unbelievably prescient book was published.

She, equally presciently, died from cancer in 1964.

Here’s, also, to Library of America, which has chosen season (actually Spring 2018) to publish,
“Silent Spring and Other Writings on the Environment” by Rachel Carson.

Here’s also to the London Review of Books for publishing in its June 6 edition a review by Meehan Crist.

Here are three samples from  Crist’s review: 

1/ Human activity has led to the stripmallification of nature: complex forest ecosystems are cleared to make way for fields of a single crop; grasslands and wetlands are paved over for the expansion of roads and cities; non-native species – carried from here to there by humans – eat the local food and kill the local young and homogenise formerly diverse landscapes as effectively as any bulldozer; whole animal populations already poisoned by pesticides and pollution are hunted or fished to a ghostly semblance of their former density, and their absence in turn damages the ecosystems in which they once thrived.

2/ Sperm counts in men around the world have dropped by 50 per cent in the last four decades – men today are half as fertile as their grandfathers were. If this downward trend continues, as it seems to be doing, humanity may be incapable of unassisted reproduction within decades. 

3/ A capitalist system built on the plunder of the natural world must inevitably be threatened by a grassroots movement to stop that plunder.

Yes, folks. Time to shout out loud.

Next: Running for Your Life: Routine 66