Table des matières

 

Prologue

Central Alberta, Somewhere Near Rumsey

Westbound

Retlaw

On Fire for the Rest of My Life

Rossdale Flats and the Bomb Shelter

The West and Its Ruins

Swan Hills

Campus Saint-Jean

The End of the World and the Ends of the Earth

Dalum

Orphans

St. Paul

My Seventies

Strathcona Science Park

The Years Before Me, the Years Behind

Newbrook

Ancestors and Descendants

Wostok and Spaca Moskalyk

Home for the Time Being

Packingtown

The Most Important Things Have Already Happened

Holy Transfiguration

Standing Pose

Rowley

“Your Cell Will Teach You”

Newcastle Mine

Time Management

Abbotsford

Keeping Time

Rochfort Bridge

Pigeons

Palliser Triangle

Who Is That?

Bunchberry Meadows

Top Ten Crises

Beaverhill Lake

Epilogue: Eastbound

References

 

Braiding together personal, collective, and historical explorations of what it means to “go west,” Half-Light offers deep reflections on the meaning of life, middle age, and climate catastrophe.

La description

Braiding together personal, collective, and historical explorations of what it means to “go west,” Amy Kaler’s Half-Light: Westbound on a Hot Planet offers deep reflections on the meaning of life, middle age, and climate catastrophe. Her memoir weaves together three strands: living with the knowledge of one’s own aging and mortality; the slow-moving catastrophes of climate change; and the human history of the North American settler west, especially locations that hold traces of vanished pasts. Many of the “ruins” Kaler explores—faded hamlets, bunkers, fields of cars, bends in the river—are interesting in themselves, and some serve as emblems of hope, generational commitment abandoned by contemporary heirs, faith, hubris, even carelessness. These stops are intertwined with reflections on aging, temporality, and change, making the book feel like a deeply satisfying road trip with a thoughtful friend. Moving from meditative to sobering in compelling and measured ways, Half-Light shimmers with urgency and suggestion.

Reviews

Listed in "Most Anticipated: Our 2024 Nonfiction Spring Preview" by 49th Shelf, February 7, 2024