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A profound meditation on climate change and the Anthropocene and an urgent search for the fossilsindustrial, chemical, geologicalthat humans are leaving behind







A Times Book of the Year A Daily Telegraph Book of the Year

Arvustused

Fascinating Margaret Atwood on twitter



What do we owe to the world that comes after us? In this superbly researched and imagined book, David Farrier invites us to expand our sense of deep time to include the deep future Caspar Henderson, author of A New Map of Wonders



Footprints bears witness to the hastening catastrophe of the Anthropocene, illustrating not just the permanence of the traces humans leave behind, but also the impermanence of the human. Profound, urgent, transformative, it is a remarkable book. James Bradley, author of Ghost Species



Mr Farriers prose glitters As Mr Farrier notes, even if pollution and consumption ceased tomorrow, their effects would take millennia to unwind. Human life is etched into the fossil record for aeons to come. The challenge is to learnto examine our present by the eerie light cast by the onrushing future. His subtle, elegant book rises to that challenge Economist



It is an oddly hopeful exploration of deep time and a world doing just fine without us. New Scientist



Farrier races through the past and makes brief stops in the present before soaring into the deep future, all the while exploring our capacity as human beings to leave traces behind us It echoes many of the concerns of nature writers such as Kathleen Jamie, Katharine Norbury and Robert Macfarlane, but from a different coign of vantage. Farrier is less nature writer an more smart thinker At its best, there are moments when the eye of the poet and the analyst come together in memorable flight Literary Review



All decent people want to be remembered well. In the ancient world, moral life was often seen as the effort to be a good ancestor. If thats how you see things, David Farriers brilliant, plangent book will leave you gasping with shame. Our grandchildren (if any survive) will look back on us with contempt The Oldie, Charles Foster

David Farrier teaches English Literature at the University of Edinburgh. He was a recipient of the Society of Literatures Giles St Aubyn Award. David was an adviser on Deep Time, the 2016 Edinburgh International Festival opening event, which told the 350 million-year-old story of the formation of Edinburgh, and recently held a prestigious Leverhulme Fellowship at the University of New South Wales. His work has appeared in Aeon and The Atlantic.