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Climate ChangeMain MenuIntroductionTimeline"2012" - Overview"Eden" by Tim Lebbon - Overview"Snowpiercer" - Overview"The Day After Tomorrow" - Overview"Dr. Stone" - OverviewWorks CitedByron Matysek9e3d7f49bbedbf10b3c828457e547d45773953d7Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079Logan Bogue85869dc40ccec3a5ac2597e18dd1b1a7f653fd92Zachary Harrison557a0a5d8614d660b3baf9cb64f2642dc1af668a
"Eden" - Related Novels
12023-03-16T13:13:33-07:00Zachary Harrison557a0a5d8614d660b3baf9cb64f2642dc1af668a425914plain2023-03-17T12:49:11-07:00Emily White828aec9878c5743ec1536806a0be2b4768e65079Eden by Tim Lebbon is in a very unexplored and not tapped into eco horror novel genre and experts expect that there will be many more writers capitalizing on the climate anxiety that has been building amongst todays youth. Some novels that have begun to capitalize on this anxiety are The New Wilderness by Diane Cook, a novel about how even a society created with the main idea of "leave no waste" can turn into a dystopian and authoritarian society, and Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer, a novel which capitalizes on the anxiety of nature overtaking humanity in a similar manner to how humanity has taken over nature. As anxiety about the increasing climate change increases the number of novels we see taking advantage of this anxiety will also increase.