cover image Going Away to Think: Engagement, Retreat, and Ecocritical Responsibility

Going Away to Think: Engagement, Retreat, and Ecocritical Responsibility

Scott Slovic, . . Univ. of Nevada, $24.95 (245pp) ISBN 978-0-87417-756-5

In this uneven essay collection that veers between the pedantic and profound, Slovic looks through the lens of literature and life to examine the balance between activism and contemplation: “the responsibility... to be fully present in this life and the responsibility... to be involved with the transgressions and the opportunities of my community.” Some essays are almost purely didactic, such as “Ecocriticism,” which outlines essential but hardly earth-shattering strategies for ecological writing: storytelling, values (a rejection of supposed scholarly neutrality), communication (“so much literary scholarship is unreadable garbage”) and contact. At other times Slovic is subtle, poetic and provocative, as in “Be Prepared for the Worst,” a deeply moving warning against “the sweet sadness of future remorse” that demonstrates how a personal “worst”—the death of Slovic's own child, for example—holds more “emotional sharpness” than hugely tragic but slow-moving, “large, systemic patterns” like ecological deterioration. Despite the academic tone, Slovic's struggle to engage meaningfully with humanity and art in order to fight for a natural world he loves will resonate with readers grappling with their own balancing acts between the personal and planetary. (Sept.)