Paperback, 148 pages

English language

Published Nov. 17, 2021 by Center for Humans & Nature.

ISBN:
978-1-7368625-0-6
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5 stars (2 reviews)

Vol. 1. – Planet Cosmic/Elemental/Planetary Kinship

With every breath, every sip of water, every meal, we are reminded that our lives are inseparable from the life of the world—and the cosmos—in ways both material and spiritual. What are the sources of our deepest evolutionary and planetary connections, and of our profound longing for kinship? 

Contributors: David Abram, Ginny Battson, Marcia Bjornerud, Brenda Cárdenas, Ceridwen Dovey, Marcelo Gleiser, Art Goodtimes, Sean Hill, Robin Wall Kimmerer, J. Drew Lanham, Manulani Aluli Meyer, Steve Paulson, Craig Santos Perez, Heather Swan, Bron Taylor, Andrew S. Yang

8 editions

reviewed Planet by Robin Wall Kimmerer (Kinship: Belonging In A World Of Relations, #1)

Water, Moon, Mountain

4 stars

Planet is the first of a 5-volume curated collection of essays and poems about kinship released by the Centre for Humans and Nature. As with many collections, it features a variety of writing, some strong and some not. The first volume is on "planet" and combines thoughts on this pale blue dot from thinkers, writers, artists, poets and philosophers.

Overall, the writing is of a very high standard and the collection is well presented. Standout essays include Andrew S. Yang's Kinshape, which is a conversetion with stardust as kin, via his mother. Co-editor Robin Wall Kimmerer's part-speculative fiction about humans being invited back into the family by other creatures that share this space is thoughtful and wonderful. Ceridwen Dovey's essay on giving rights to the moon raises fascinating questions and is written with a beautiful sense of care. However some of the essays fail to land, particularly the "celebrity" …

reviewed Planet by Robin Wall Kimmerer (Kinship: Belonging In A World Of Relations, #1)

Review of 'Planet' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

What would you say is the mark of a good anthology: loving every essay in it, or loving only some? Now that I’m old I find myself grateful for editors who take risks, who include voices I might not otherwise hear.

This is an exceptional collection. All the entries made me think, or change the way I think. Some made me work. It’s been two weeks since I finished reading, and I’m still mulling over parts of it. I love the recurring themes of language: “kinning” as an active verb, use of proper pronouns for nonhuman life forms, how our words shape (and limit) the ways we see the world around us.

Subjects

  • Nature
  • kinship
  • care
  • philosophy