The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse

Author:   Dale Pendell
Publisher:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781623174026


Pages:   296
Publication Date:   08 January 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse


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Overview

"Based in scientific reality, The Great Bay presents a powerful fictional vision of a fast-approaching future in which sea levels rise and a decimated population must find new ways to live. The story begins in 2021 with a worldwide pandemic followed by the gradual rising of the seas. Pendell's vision is all encompassing--he describes the rising seas' impact on countries and continents around the world. But his imaginative storytelling focuses on California. A ""great bay"" forms in California's Central Valley and expands during a 16,000-year period. As the years pass, and technology seems to regress, even memory of a ""precollapse"" world blends into myth. Grizzly bears and other large predators return to the California hills, and civilization reverts to a richly imagined medieval society marked by guilds and pilgrimages, followed even later by hunting and gathering societies. Pendell's focus is on the lives of people struggling with love, wars, and physical survival thousands of years in California's future. He deftly mixes poetic imagery, news-reporting-style writing, interviews with survivors, and maps documenting the geographic changes. In the end, powerful human values that have been with us for 40,000 years begin to reemerge and remind us that they are desperately needed--in the present. ***WINNER, Best Science Fiction, 2010 Green Book Festival Based in scientific reality, Dale Pendell presents a powerful fictional vision of a fast-approaching future in which sea levels rise and a decimated population must find new ways to live. The Great Bay begins in 2021 with a worldwide pandemic followed by the gradual rising of the seas. Pendell's vision is all encompassing-he describes the rising seas' impact on countries and continents around the world. But his imaginative storytelling focuses on California. A ""great bay"" forms in California's Central Valley and expands during a 16,000-year period. As the years pass, and technology seems to regress, even memory of a ""precollapse"" world blends into myth. Grizzly bears and other large predators return to the California hills, and civilization reverts to a richly imagined medieval society marked by guilds and pilgrimages, followed even later by hunting and gathering societies. Pendell's focus is on the lives of people struggling with love, wars, and physical survival thousands of years in California's future. He deftly mixes poetic imagery, news-reporting-style writing, interviews with survivors, and maps documenting the geographic changes. In the end, powerful human values that have been with us for 40,000 years begin to reemerge and remind us that they are desperately needed-in the present."

Full Product Details

Author:   Dale Pendell
Publisher:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
Imprint:   North Atlantic Books,U.S.
Weight:   0.368kg
ISBN:  

9781623174026


ISBN 10:   1623174023
Pages:   296
Publication Date:   08 January 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

An imaginative and thought-provoking look at life in California 16,000 years in the future after a global pandemic and environmental catastrophe in 2021. -San Francisco Chronicle Great extinctions have ravaged the planet before, and humanity is not immune. The Great Bay is a novel set in the far flung future. Disease ravages mankind and thousands of years in the future, the world has greatly changed, with technology not as prevalent as it once was. An environmental examination of the world and how humans can live in tune with it for a better future, The Great Bay is a wonderful concept with a solid message, highly recommended. -Midwest Book Review A remarkable work of ecological science fiction. -Suvudu The days I spent reading The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse by Dale Pendell were uneasy ones... Perhaps Dale Pendell's gripping, chilling, and utterly believable fictional account of future life on earth will make all of us stop and think about what we want the future to look like. We don't want our worst nightmares to come true. -Read All Day In the tradition of J.M. Coetzee and Cormac McCarthy, Pendell's award-winning writing proves sophisticated and literary, raising critical questions for the future of humanity and the planet as it brings a startling contribution to the environmental concerns of the day. -The Union This is an amazing novel...it's impossible to read and not do a lot of thinking about the future, as well as what we need to do about it - right now. -David Wilk, WritersCast A light boat, sailing across a broad bay, with the tops of ancient skyscrapers deep below. Our western North American world, hundreds and then thousands of years into the future. Dozens of remarkable stories, in the unfolding ecologies of post collapse, post climate change. Civilizations and technologies die or are lost, but human ingenuity-families, tribes, and villages, the musicians, shamans, philosophers, and people of power-live on. -Gary Snyder, poet, Mountains and Rivers Without End The Great Bay is an extraordinary book that thrives at the intersection of dystopian imagination and planet-scale history...A wise, cunning, and important book. -Steve Silberman, Contributing Editor, Wired This is a winner of the best of Science Fiction award from the Green Book Festival and it's easy to see why. It's a book of incredible scope and storytelling...I found it completely engrossing. -Robert Phoenix, The Daily Farcast Utterly fascinating and alternately horrifying and deeply moving. -Gayle Wattawa, ed., Inlandia: A Literary Journey Through California's Inland Empire The Great Bay is the perfect light post-apocalyptic novel for summer beach reading. -Restoring Paradise The Great Bay is a wonderful addition to the subgenre of post-apocalyptic novels set in California...Pendell manages to communicate a wry earth wisdom and pragmatic DIY optimism about the big bummer that may very well lie ahead. -RoyChristopher.com I rate this book easily five of five stars; quite simply it is one of the best science fiction books of 2010. -Alternating Reality Books Pendell is uniquely placed to tell this tale. Of course his poetic skills make for vivid images and insights; unflinching depictions of horror mingle with tender compassion and irony in the early post-Collapse decades, while the later years give ample space for the broader strokes of his social and cultural imagination. -Dreamflesh Send [this] gripping global-warming-post-apocalyptic novel to your cousin Stan who just bought a Hummer. -Carrie Sturrock, OregonianLive.com A kind of Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire for the entire human species...Pendell's Great Bay has been aptly described as 'wise, cunning, ecological fiction.' -Quantum Tantra [Dale Pendell] has some SF chops and can spin a yarn...from a SF/utopia perspective this book is a win; Pendell did everything that he set out to do here, and he did it well. From a political perspective? I can't imagine that it's anything other than a win there too, even if it is controversial. -Omphalos' SF Book Reviews Pendell draws on a wild and wide-ranging knowledge of poetry, philosophy, history, and chemistry to bring us the world of The Great Bay. We should be so lucky to have such a guide-- in a fictional or actual post-apocalyptic world. -The Canary Review


An imaginative and thought-provoking look at life in California 16,000 years in the future after a global pandemic and environmental catastrophe in 2021. -San Francisco Chronicle Great extinctions have ravaged the planet before, and humanity is not immune. The Great Bay is a novel set in the far flung future. Disease ravages mankind and thousands of years in the future, the world has greatly changed, with technology not as prevalent as it once was. An environmental examination of the world and how humans can live in tune with it for a better future, The Great Bay is a wonderful concept with a solid message, highly recommended. -Midwest Book Review A remarkable work of ecological science fiction. -Suvudu The days I spent reading The Great Bay: Chronicles of the Collapse by Dale Pendell were uneasy ones... Perhaps Dale Pendell's gripping, chilling, and utterly believable fictional account of future life on earth will make all of us stop and think about what we want the future to look like. We don't want our worst nightmares to come true. -Read All Day In the tradition of J.M. Coetzee and Cormac McCarthy, Pendell's award-winning writing proves sophisticated and literary, raising critical questions for the future of humanity and the planet as it brings a startling contribution to the environmental concerns of the day. -The Union This is an amazing novel...it's impossible to read and not do a lot of thinking about the future, as well as what we need to do about it - right now. -David Wilk, WritersCast A light boat, sailing across a broad bay, with the tops of ancient skyscrapers deep below. Our western North American world, hundreds and then thousands of years into the future. Dozens of remarkable stories, in the unfolding ecologies of post collapse, post climate change. Civilizations and technologies die or are lost, but human ingenuity-families, tribes, and villages, the musicians, shamans, philosophers, and people of power-live on. -Gary Snyder, poet, Mountains and Rivers Without End The Great Bay is an extraordinary book that thrives at the intersection of dystopian imagination and planet-scale history...A wise, cunning, and important book. -Steve Silberman, Contributing Editor, Wired This is a winner of the best of Science Fiction award from the Green Book Festival and it's easy to see why. It's a book of incredible scope and storytelling...I found it completely engrossing. -Robert Phoenix, The Daily Farcast Utterly fascinating and alternately horrifying and deeply moving. -Gayle Wattawa, ed., Inlandia: A Literary Journey Through California's Inland Empire The Great Bay is the perfect light post-apocalyptic novel for summer beach reading. -Restoring Paradise The Great Bay is a wonderful addition to the subgenre of post-apocalyptic novels set in California...Pendell manages to communicate a wry earth wisdom and pragmatic DIY optimism about the big bummer that may very well lie ahead. -RoyChristopher.com I rate this book easily five of five stars; quite simply it is one of the best science fiction books of 2010. -Alternating Reality Books Pendell is uniquely placed to tell this tale. Of course his poetic skills make for vivid images and insights; unflinching depictions of horror mingle with tender compassion and irony in the early post-Collapse decades, while the later years give ample space for the broader strokes of his social and cultural imagination. -Dreamflesh Send [this] gripping global-warming-post-apocalyptic novel to your cousin Stan who just bought a Hummer. -Carrie Sturrock, OregonianLive.com A kind of Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire for the entire human species...Pendell's Great Bay has been aptly described as 'wise, cunning, ecological fiction.' -Quantum Tantra [Dale Pendell] has some SF chops and can spin a yarn...from a SF/utopia perspective this book is a win; Pendell did everything that he set out to do here, and he did it well. From a political perspective? I can't imagine that it's anything other than a win there too, even if it is controversial. -Omphalos' SF Book Reviews Pendell draws on a wild and wide-ranging knowledge of poetry, philosophy, history, and chemistry to bring us the world of The Great Bay. We should be so lucky to have such a guide-- in a fictional or actual post-apocalyptic world. -The Canary Review


Author Information

Dale Pendell is a widely published author and poet. A consultant for herbal product development and botanical surveys, and a computer scientist, he founded Kuksu- Journal of Backcountry Writing and cofounded the Primitive Arts Institute. He lives in Penn Valley, CA.

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