Sunday, July 12, 2026

Earth Is Done For. ‘Earth 7’ Is About What’s Next.

 Unferth writes with haunting beauty about our reckless destruction. During a deep-sea field trip with other children, Dylan sees an underwater graveyard composed of “a thousand creatures the size of elephants, sea animals previously unknown, skeletons under spotlights.” “A new beginning was not on the way,” Dylan realizes. “She was part of the rubble.”

But “Earth 7” is a celebration as much as a lamentation. We’re part of this world, “a place where terrible and wonderful beauties are coming to pieces at every moment and others are constructing themselves out of the remains.” Unferth reminds us that while we may be facing microchip uploads and Martian colonies, our human and planetary heritage endures. Love, wonder, horror and all of life — it’s here in “Earth 7” and here on actual Earth. It’s our home, while we can keep it.

https://www.nytimes.com/shared/v1/cl-single.html?smid=url-share&rsrc=cl-share&uri=nyt%253A%252F%252Farticle%252Fdac547f0-de18-51f2-8d69-748520fb4a96&ca=602c188aef3355858d101b7b4d7b4eab&smid=nytcore-ios-share&rsrc=cl-share

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