Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)
The World-Ending Fire by Wendell Berry
Add The World-Ending Fire to bookshelf
Add to Bookshelf

The World-Ending Fire

Best Seller
The World-Ending Fire by Wendell Berry
Paperback $16.95
May 14, 2019 | ISBN 9781640091979

Buy from Other Retailers:

See All Formats (1) +
  • $16.95

    May 14, 2019 | ISBN 9781640091979

    Buy from Other Retailers:

  • May 01, 2018 | ISBN 9781640090293

    Buy from Other Retailers:

Product Details

Praise

New & Noteworthy, The New York Times Book Review
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year
One of Spirituality & Practice‘s Best Spiritual Books of the Year

“If these essays were required reading, I think our society would be in a lot better shape.” ―Nick Offerman, Entertainment Weekly

“Here is a human being speaking with calm and sanity out of the wilderness. We would do well to hear him.” ―The Washington Post Book World

“America’s greatest philosopher on sustainable life and living.” ―Chicago Tribune

“A fascinating tribute to the life of the land . . . Berry’s writings are timelier than ever.” ―Laura Garmeson, Financial Times

“Berry reminds us that to take small solutions off the table is also a kind of giving up. Some conservationists believe that because ecological problems are structural, there is no point in growing and cooking your own food, in setting down roots in a community, in being kind to your neighbors . . . You may as well drive as much as you want, waste paper towels, and buy meat from corporations that keep pigs in excrement-coated cages. Berry reminds us that to live this way is to forfeit our souls. It is important―no matter what is going on at a macro level―to be kind to your family, your neighbors and the land.” ―The New Republic

“Compelling, luminous . . . our modern-day Thoreau. He is unlike anybody else writing today. He writes at least as well as George Orwell and has an urgent message for modern industrial capitalism . . . nobody can risk ignoring him.” ―Andrew Marr, New Statesman

“This collection sees the American published on these islands for the first time, and now he has finally stepped ashore, it’s worth getting to know him . . . Berry overturns plenty of thoughtful topsoil on environmental issues with a precise pen, and clears any thicket of cosy consensus with a clear eye and cutting hand.” ―Irish Times

“It’s no great observation to note that we live in an incredibly polarized time, but, curiously, Berry doesn’t fit neatly into the conservative or liberal camp. There is just enough in his writing to both satisfy and provoke those of all ideological allegiances. Thanks to the Library of America’s efforts to reissue his writings beginning with the first half of his Port William novels and stories as well as his long-time publisher Counterpoint releasing The World-Ending Fire: The Essential Wendell Berry, a collection of his non-fiction edited by the aforementioned Kingsnorth, it’s never been easier to find a place to start . . . In these times we could all use his patient instruction.” ―Psychology Today

The World-Ending Fire: The Essential Wendell Berry is a selection of 31 essays spanning five decades of his works, and it could not have come at a better time as our nation thrashes about in search of a voice of reason. Who better than Berry to explain to us ‘who we are, where we are, and what we must do to live’? . . . [It] ought to be required reading in every classroom . . . Wendell Berry is our National Guardian Angel!” ―The Christian Science Monitor

“[Berry] speaks out powerfully and poignantly on behalf of family farmers, their land, and their small towns. His spiritual vision of life is informed by a deep love of nature, a profound regard for the details of place, a respect for small-scale economies, and an advocacy of wise stewardship of the earth. Paul Kingsnorth chose the 31 essays for this handsome collection as ample evidence of Berry’s inspiring defense of character qualities like rugged individualism, diligence, loyalty, and reverence for nature.” ―Spirituality & Practice

“Whether you’re new to the words of Wendell Berry or a longtime fan of this Kentucky poet, farmer, and land-protector, you’ll want to add this tome of unforgettable, earth-moving Southern outdoors writing to the shelf.” ―Garden & Gun

“These works are mostly about small-town America, and mostly set on Berry’s farm at Lane’s Landing, once a riverboat stop on the Kentucky River near Port Royal, Kentucky. But not one word stoops to smug nostalgia. He is instead trying to prove that science and economics happen in a place: he draws endlessly and non-repetitively on the deep well of the lived truth of farm life, which delivers up sweet, clear lines of poetry and local lore and a kind of immediate authenticity . . . In writing about the fate of the natural world, Berry is a prophet of the domestic. These essays are about how to make a household here on Earth. That project is made of the ‘unrelentingly practical’ things that can be done and that give us hope. Feel the dirt under your feet. You have the power.” ―Los Angeles Review of Books

“A pleasing selection of essays from the lifelong farmer and award-winning writer . . . A great place to start for those who are not familiar with Berry’s work; for those who are, it will be a nostalgic stroll down a rural, wooded Memory Lane. In this day and age, his writings are must-reads.” ―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“Wendell Berry’s admirers―a loyal band several generations deep―may blink at the subtitle of this selection of his essays. ‘Essential? What’s not essential?’ To read or reread these pieces is, however, to warmly affirm editor Kingsnorth. Berry is the philosopher and the prophet of agriculture, community, stability, and friendship, and there is nothing sentimental or utopian anywhere in his advocacy of those things.” ―Booklist (starred review)

“Berry’s graceful essays have long been models of eloquence, insight, and conviction . . . Newcomers will find the works exceptionally timely, and the book as a whole a thoughtful introduction to Berry’s writing.” ―Publishers Weekly

Looking for More Great Reads?
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Back to Top