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The Great Transition : A Novel
The Great Transition : A Novel
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Author(s): Fuller Googins, Nick
ISBN No.: 9781668010761
Pages: 352
Year: 202408
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 26.59
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

This reading group guide for THE GREAT TRANSITION includes an introduction, discussion questions, ideas for enhancing your book club, and a Q&A with author Nick Fuller Googins . The suggested questions are intended to help your reading group find new and interesting angles and topics for your discussion. We hope that these ideas will enrich your conversation and increase your enjoyment of the book. Introduction For fans of Station Eleven and The Ministry for the Future , this richly imaginative, immersive, and "profound" (Alice Elliott Dark, author of Fellowship Point ) novel is the electrifying story of a family in crisis that unfolds against the backdrop of our near future. Emi Vargas, whose parents helped save the world, is tired of being told how lucky she is to have been born after the climate crisis. But following the public assassination of a dozen climate criminals, Emi''s mother, Kristina, a possible suspect, disappears, and Emi''s illusions of utopia are shattered. A determined Emi and her father, Larch, journey from their home in Nuuk, Greenland to New York City, now a lightly populated storm-surge outpost built from the ruins of the former metropolis. But they aren''t the only ones looking for Kristina.


Thirty years earlier, Larch first came to New York with a team of volunteers to save the city from rising waters and torrential storms. Kristina was on the front lines of a different battle, fighting massive wildfires that ravaged the western United States. They became part of a movement that changed the world--the Great Transition--forging a new society and finding each other in the process. Alternating between Emi''s desperate search for her mother and a meticulously rendered, heart-stopping account of her parents'' experiences during the Great Transition, this novel beautifully shows how our actions today determine our fate tomorrow. A triumphant debut, The Great Transition is a breathtaking rendering of our near future, told through the story of one family trying to protect each other and the place we all call home. Topics & Questions for Discussion 1. Compare and contrast Emi''s parents, Kristina and Larch. How do they define the future? What are their different priorities for their daughter and themselves? 2.


Emi often listens to music (specifically the "oldies") when she is worried about the planet and wondering what she can do now that the crisis is over. What does this tell us about humanity in the post-Transition future? Do you find yourself using music to cope with anxiety in your life? Do you ever turn to music to grapple with with the big problems facing society? 3. The field producer Joanna Lee reminds Larch that Corps Power was propaganda: "The good kind. Hearts and minds." Do you believe Culture Corps had good intentions in televising positive content about fighting the climate crisis? Do you think there such a thing as good propaganda? 4. Larch and Kristina have different ethnic backgrounds. How does race and immigration play a role in their individual worldviews and their outlooks on the future? 5. Kristina says, "School isn''t the only place to learn .


School can''t teach you how to live with hunger, or go weeks without a shower. The greatest lessons come from life experience." Do you agree with Kristina''s view? Why do you think the author, who is an elementary school teacher, would include this perspective in his novel? 6. We get to witness the progress of Emi''s North American History paper for Mrs. Helmandi''s class. What do these drafts reveal to readers? How was this component necessary for the novel? 7. Larch''s best friend, Lucas, is Puerto Rican. However, he views the Transition differently from Kristina, who was born and raised in central Mexico.


If Lucas and Kristina are both refugees from the Global South, why don''t they share similar views? How do they interpret their experiences differently? 8. "A revolution is not a tea party" is thrown into conversations multiple times throughout the book, a variation of the famous saying coined by Mao Zedong. What does this phrase mean to you? Can a revolution be peaceful? Give examples of historic revolutions that emulate, or contradict, that slogan. 9. Why do you think Indigenous people are exempt from extraction duty? What does this tell readers in regard to the relationship between Indigenous people and North American land post-Transition? 10. Kristina abruptly leaves Emi and Larch to work for the Furies. Later, Kristina tells Larch that she did it to keep her family safe. How does Kristina view parenting, in comparison to how Larch views it? Do you consider Kristina to be a good mother? How do traditional parenting roles play into this conversation? 11.


Reena and Angel, who befriend Emi in New York, want to join the Furies and participate in the revolution. Do you think children and young adults have a place in this revolution? In what ways do children and teenagers today become involved in political conversations, such as those about gun control or the climate? Should they be involved? Why or why not? 12. Socioeconomics play a huge role in this book. We learn that the Furies are targeting rich officials whose actions led to the climate crisis. In a conversation between members of Larch''s deconstruction crew, his coworker Ellen says "The rich are coming off a two-hundred-year rager that burned our planet to the ground. We''re the cleanup crew. The moment we''re done the party will be back on. And if you think you''re getting an invite, Larch, I just feel sorry for you.


" What are your thoughts about the class gap? Do you believe, if given the chance, the rich will relinquish their lifestyles and accept a lower standard of living? Is there a chance that a new, more equal "normal" can be instated? 13. Larch is vocal about Emi enjoying her youth and participating in celebrations. Are celebrations essential to society? Can joy be defined as another form of resistance? In what ways do you practice active joy? 14. Larch and Kristina''s love story is one with many obstacles and much turbulence. Towards the very end of the book, we witness the conversation between the couple about having a child. Why do you think Kristina changed her mind about having a child? Do you think young people today have valid concerns about bringing children into the world, given the ongoing climate crisis? Enhance Your Book Club 1. The Great Transition emphasizes the importance of environmental and climate activism. Research local climate or environmental groups, an environmental cause in your area, or other ways you can incorporate climate activism into your life.


Share these ideas with your book club members. 2. Emi''s love of music, especially "oldies," is very present throughout the novel, with a particular emphasis on musical artists from the 1990s and 2000s. Visit https://sptfy.com/thegoldenoldies to enjoy Emi''s playlist with your book club! 3. To learn more about Nick Fuller Googins, visit nickfg.com. A Conversation with Nick Fuller Googins When did you start writing the manuscript for The Great Transition ? What inspired you to write this plot centered around the climate crisis? I started seriously thinking about the novel in 2018, when I was installing solar panels in rural Maine.


At the time there was a lot of exciting momentum for big climate solutions, primarily the Green New Deal, a plan to put tens of millions of Americans to work saving the climate, installing solar and wind infrastructure, building public transportation, and so on, transitioning us away from fossil fuels as rapidly as possible. I felt a glimmer of real hope. Here was a concrete roadmap that we could afford as a country. The only thing preventing it was politics, meaning we could, theoretically, with a lot of work and organizing, make it a reality. So there I was, lugging solar panels up ladders, scrambling around scorching rooftops, and wondering what a mass mobilization to save the planet would look like, and what if I could be a part of it? How might it feel to be one small character in a movement so big and hopeful and transformative? Those were the first seeds of The Great Transition . Do you think your role as an educator influenced the way you wrote this book and Emi''s character? I''ve had the fortune of working with children for almost two decades. Now I teach fourth grade, but I''ve taught kids as young as kindergarten and as old as college freshmen. I''ve come to see teaching as emotional and social work first, with academics second.


Kids are smaller humans learning how to navigate the joys and traumas of life on our planet (just as most of us bigger humans are still figuring out!). I''ve taught some of the wealthiest children in America, as well as incarcerated children and victims of abuse and devastating poverty. All of them, regardless of background, are simultaneously anxious, sarcastic, silly, hopeful, vulnerable, eager, and present, just like Emi. Emi emerged as a character from all the wonderful kids I''ve worked with, each of them beautifully complex, like her, trying to figure out how to best live life. Kristina and Larch view the future so differently. Between the two, who do you see yourself more in? I do aspire to Kristina''s passion, her commitment to justice, her belief that the struggle is never fully won. Her mentality was a driving force in my twenties, whe.


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