With three roads and a population of just over 500 people, Shishmaref,
Alaska seems like an unlikely center of the climate change debate. But
the island, home to Iñupiaq Eskimos who still live off subsistence
harvesting, is falling into the sea, and climate change is, at least in
part, to blame. While countries sputter and stall over taking
environmental action, Shishmaref is out of time.
Publications from the New York Times to Esquire have covered this
disappearing village, yet few have taken the time to truly show the
community and the two millennia of traditions at risk. In Fierce
Climate, Sacred Ground, Elizabeth Marino brings Shishmaref into sharp
focus as a place where people in a close-knit, determined community are
confronting the realities of our changing planet every day. She shows
how physical dangers challenge lives, while the stress and uncertainty
challenge culture and identity. Marino also draws on Shishmaref's
experiences to show how disasters and the outcomes of climate change
often fall heaviest on those already burdened with other social risks
and often to communities who have contributed least to the problem.
Stirring and sobering, Fierce Climate, Sacred Ground proves that the
consequences of unchecked climate change are anything but theoretical.