Is a River Alive?
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4.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
From the celebrated writer, observer and naturalist Robert Macfarlane comes a brilliant, perspective-shifting new book, which answers a resounding "yes" to the question of its title.
At the heart of Is a River Alive? is a single, transformative idea: that rivers are not mere matter for human use, but living beings, who should be recognized as such in both imagination and law. Macfarlane takes the reader on a mind-expanding global journey into the history, futures, people and places of the ancient, urgent concept.
Around the world, rivers are dying from pollution, drought and damming. But a powerful movement is also underway to recognize the lives and the rights of rivers, and to re-animate our relationships with these vast, mysterious presences whose landscapes we share. The young "rights of nature" movement has lit up activists, artists, law-makers and politicians across six continents—and become the focus for revolutionary thinking about rivers in particular.
The book flows like water, from the mountains to the sea, over three major journeys. The first is to northern Ecuador, where a miraculous cloud-forest and its rivers are threatened with destruction by Canadian gold-mining. The second is to the wounded rivers, creeks and lagoons of southern India, where a desperate battle to save the lives of these waterbodies is underway. The third is to northeastern Quebec, where a spectacular wild river—the Mutehekau or Magpie—is being defended from death by damming in a river-rights campaign led by an extraordinary Innu poet and leader called Rita Mestokosho.
Is A River Alive? is at once a literary work of art, a rallying cry and a catalyst for change. It is a book that will open hearts, spark debates and challenge perspectives. A clarion call to re-centre rivers in our stories, law and politics, it invites us to radically re-imagine not only rivers but life itself. At the heart of this vital, beautiful book is the recognition that our fate flows with that of rivers—and always has.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
A river can flood, feed, vanish, or remember. In naturalist Robert Macfarlane’s Is a River Alive?, it can also speak, if we’re willing to listen. Blending travel writing, environmental history, and quiet personal reflection, Macfarlane journeys from cloud forest to coastline, tracing how different communities are reimagining rivers not as resources but as living beings with rights. Each journey is rooted in landscape and shaped by the people who risk everything to protect what flows through it. Alongside these global stories, Macfarlane returns often to a chalk stream near his own home, threading the political with the personal as he reflects on time, belonging, and ecological care. His prose moves with clarity and depth, inviting readers to see rivers as fellow travellers in our shared world. Is a River Alive? is both a plea and a promise that we might listen more closely, and live more wisely, in a world where everything that flows is trying to speak.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Nature writer Macfarlane (Underland) serves up a lyrical inquiry into the implications of treating rivers as living beings worthy of reverence and legal rights. Recounting his travels along the Río Los Cedros in Ecuador, Macfarlane profiles the dogged conservationists defending the river from logging and mining interests, and discusses how their activism secured the inclusion of legal protections for the natural world in the country's most recent constitution, ratified in 2008. He weaves together his recollections of kayaking Canada's Magpie River with an account of how Indigenous resistance to hydroelectric development successfully prevented the river's damming and led a municipal government to recognize it as "a living, rights-bearing being" in 2021. The fate of Ennore Creek—an offshoot of the Kosasthalaiyar River in Chennai, India—serves as a cautionary tale of what happens when rivers aren't protected, Macfarlane suggests, describing how British colonial zoning practices concentrated polluting industries on the city's outskirts where the water still flows "grey-green and sluggish... slick with effluents, sewage and other pollutants." Macfarlane skillfully braids his immersive travel writing with illuminating historical background, all told in lithe prose ("The horizon widens into ocean and the co-motion of sky and water is lost in a white, grainy light, and there the river's last trace is slow-vanishing spirals in the water, shallowing as they slip on"). Nature lovers will be riveted.