This is a comedy about climate change, in which a girl and a donkey
become friends, then decide to marry time.
A lyric fable, Life in a Field intersperses Katie Peterson's
slow-moving, cinematic, and sensual writing with three folios of
photographs by Young Suh. Introspection, wish, dream, and memory mark
this tale, which is set in a location resembling twenty-first-century
California--with vistas and orchards threatened by drought and fires.
This is also a place of enchantment, a fairy-tale landscape where humans
and animals live as equals. As the girl and the donkey grow up, they
respond to the difficulties of contemporary civilization, asking a
question that meets our existential moment: What do you do with the
story you didn't wish for? A narrator's voice combines candor with
distance, attempting to find a path through our familiar strife, toward
a future that feels all but impossible, and into what remains of beauty
and pleasure. Life in a Field tries to reverse our accelerating
destruction of the natural world, reminding us of "the cold clarity we
need to continue on this earth."