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Review: Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton

The category of climate fiction, or cli-fi, arose in this millennium, but several older works of fiction have tackled the subject of climate change and its effects. Prescient examples include JG Ballard’s The Drowned World (1962) and Ursula K Le Guin’s The New Atlantis (1975). Trees in the Surrealist Garden in Hamilton Gardens, New Zealand. (Shutterstock) 432pp; Granta Books (Granta Books) In their time, these works might have sounded far-fetched or futuristic, but contemporary cli-fi often feels…

New novel Birnam Wood shows good and evil at play

Breadcrumb Trail Links Books Booker winner Eleanor Catton suggests you can’t believe in one and ignore the other Eleanor Catton Photo by Murdo MacLeod Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. Article content Birnam Wood Eleanor Catton Advertisement 2 This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT…

Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton review – hippies v billionaires | Eleanor Catton

In a literary marketplace that sometimes seems oversupplied with novels about brittle intellectuals feeling alienated from their emotions, or twentysomethings grinding axes about their exes, there is the wonder of Eleanor Catton: a novelist of lavish technical gifts who addresses herself to the world, broadly and richly conceived.Catton’s first novel, 2008’s The Rehearsal, was a small miracle. Leaping acrobatically between fictional and metafictional modes, it tells the story of a secondary-school scandal (male teacher,…

Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton review – the root of all evil | Fiction

In his great critical work The Sense of an Ending, Frank Kermode wrote about the end-directedness of fiction, the way that novels rehearse and forestall their endings – a process he called peripeteia. One thing he doesn’t discuss in that book is what happens when an ending entirely alters your understanding of the text. There are numerous examples of tricksy plot twists – think Fingersmith or Fight Club – but I’m not sure I’ve read a novel whose ending so brilliantly and brutally changes our perception of what has gone…