
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Elizabeth Rush, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Quickening: Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth, describes her voyage to the most remote place on earth, Antarctica, to see the Thwaites Glacier, a crumbling sheet of ice the size of Florida. It’s melting so fast that it's known as the "doomsday glacier.”
“The only thing I could think of as a metaphoric likeness was the wall in Game of Thrones,” says Rush. She shares her thoughts on individual climate action, carbon footprints, and how her experience in Antarctica framed her own dilemma on motherhood in a rapidly warming world.
“If I'm gonna wish a child into this world, I have to wish this world upon that child, so I better be part of the change,” Rush says.
By KCRW4.9
301301 ratings
Elizabeth Rush, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Quickening: Creation and Community at the Ends of the Earth, describes her voyage to the most remote place on earth, Antarctica, to see the Thwaites Glacier, a crumbling sheet of ice the size of Florida. It’s melting so fast that it's known as the "doomsday glacier.”
“The only thing I could think of as a metaphoric likeness was the wall in Game of Thrones,” says Rush. She shares her thoughts on individual climate action, carbon footprints, and how her experience in Antarctica framed her own dilemma on motherhood in a rapidly warming world.
“If I'm gonna wish a child into this world, I have to wish this world upon that child, so I better be part of the change,” Rush says.

38,482 Listeners

43,557 Listeners

577 Listeners

5,083 Listeners

10,736 Listeners

10,539 Listeners

1,281 Listeners

612 Listeners

665 Listeners

1,852 Listeners

1,107 Listeners

10,253 Listeners

388 Listeners

12,761 Listeners

2,504 Listeners

152 Listeners

730 Listeners

498 Listeners

389 Listeners

14,385 Listeners

27 Listeners

2,053 Listeners

1,086 Listeners