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After a long hiatus, In the Weeds picks up where we left off with a third installment of our series on the apocalyptic!
From parasitic wasps to zombie ants and the hive mind, Joe Wallace’s novel Invasive Species takes strange natural phenomena and spins them into an apocalyptic yarn, in which a new, emergent predator threatens the human species. This is an unusual take on the apocalyptic genre I explored previously in interviews with theologian Bernard McGinn (episode #18) and novelist Brian Francis Slattery (episode #21). In this case, the end-of-days is not the end for everyone, just potentially for humans. Wallace, who had a long career as a science writer, which included a book on dinosaurs for the American Museum of Natural History, finds the idea of a future in which humans are “taken down a peg” refreshing and likes the idea that life will continue, even if we don’t.
4.8
2626 ratings
After a long hiatus, In the Weeds picks up where we left off with a third installment of our series on the apocalyptic!
From parasitic wasps to zombie ants and the hive mind, Joe Wallace’s novel Invasive Species takes strange natural phenomena and spins them into an apocalyptic yarn, in which a new, emergent predator threatens the human species. This is an unusual take on the apocalyptic genre I explored previously in interviews with theologian Bernard McGinn (episode #18) and novelist Brian Francis Slattery (episode #21). In this case, the end-of-days is not the end for everyone, just potentially for humans. Wallace, who had a long career as a science writer, which included a book on dinosaurs for the American Museum of Natural History, finds the idea of a future in which humans are “taken down a peg” refreshing and likes the idea that life will continue, even if we don’t.
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