A dark past. An impossible journey. The will to survive. For fans of Flight Behavior and Station Eleven, a novel set on the brink of catastrophe, as a young woman chases the world’s last birds―and her own final chance for redemption. Migrations has been named a “most anticipated” book by Entertainment Weekly, Vulture, Elle, and more. Emily St. John Mandel calls this powerful novel “extraordinary.” Start reading Migrations now. Consequently, poets have developed a new style to describe a world fraught with environmental change. Dubbed “ecopoetry,” it takes a more critical lens towards humanity’s relationship with the planet. Rather than rely upon grand scenes of nature unfolding for the observer, ecopoetry strips away the illusion of our observer status. We are nature, entangled in its movements. Therefore, ecopoetry highlights the complex interrelationships within the environment, and shows how human societies and cultures place within them. The ecopoets listed below offer new ways of thinking and writing about nature.