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by author Hélène Meurer
Random House Canada, 2007, 480 pages, $34.95 hardcover (paper edition to be released in August 2008) By the time this month’s alive arrives in readers’ hands, Chris Turner and his Geography of Hope tour will be household names. Turner is an articulate young journalist–an original thinker based in Calgary whose culture and technology writings have enriched such publications as the Globe and Mail, the Independent, the Sunday Times, Time, and Utne Reader. Previous books have reached bestseller status, and in 2001, a magazine article in Shift earned him Canada’s highest honour, the President’s Medal in the National Magazine Awards. Turner’s Geography of Hope tour is an inspired response to current calls to action, not least of which is Turner’s new role as a father. About his daughter’s future he writes, “It makes me positively ache in places I didn’t know I had until she was born, that I can’t make her any promises.” This personal need to create a legacy of hope caused Turner to pick up pen and suitcase in search of concrete global solutions. This author begins where traditional environmentalists leave off. His is a scrapbook of a year lived optimistically in search of attractive, effective sustainability options already in practice. This is not about what we should be doing, this is about what is already being done. Turner’s book is a thoughtful reportage of existing systems and structures that demonstrate innovative action around the world. These include the tiny Danish island of Samsø, where sustainability has become commonplace and where the hydro metre literally revolves both ways as power is both used and created by local farms. In Bangkok he is surprised to see his first Plusenergiehaus, a bio-solar home efficient enough to rival the most über-engineered German sustainability projects, and one that sells energy back to the state power company. In a recent interview, Turner predicted that a critical mass of excitement will cause the paradigm shift our planet needs. He is an unabashed realist with raised glass half full, calmly writing to leapfrog us onto the map that is to be our planet’s new geography. Put Yourself on the Map Follow the writings of Chris Turner in his online blog. Get reading, get excited, see thegeographyofhope.com. Hélène Meurer is a writer and reviewer in Victoria, BC, whose hunger for new books is never satisfied. Source: alive #310, August 2008 |
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