Alice, the Zeta Cat and Climate Change

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alice, the Zeta Cat and Climate Change: A fairytale about the truth
First edition
AuthorMargret Boysen
Original titleAlice, der Klimawandel und die Katze Zeta
TranslatorMargitt Lehbert
Cover artistIassen Ghiuselev
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
GenreClimate fiction
Published in English
forthcoming
Media typePrint (hardback)
Websitewww.pik-potsdam.de/news/press-releases/201calice-the-zeta-cat-and-climate-change201d-a-fairytale-about-the-truth

Alice, the Zeta Cat and Climate Change: A fairytale about the truth is an adult fairytale about the truth by Margret Boysen. [1]

Plot[edit]

The heroine of the story, Alice, falls down a hole while on a school excursion on Potsdam's Telegraphenberg (where PIK is situated. She meets some characters which also appear in Alice in Wonderland, like the Zeta Cat.

Unlike Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire Cat, Zeta knows exactly how to figure out a correct pathway. That is how the "mathematical-metaphorical animal" can help Alice, the heroine of this story, to get her bearings in the wondrous world of science and climate change. The girl not only journeys through computer models, where she experiences glacial cycles in super-fast motion and the calamitous drying-up of rainforests, she also undergoes an inner journey through feelings like guilt and compassion. Alice enters the "Library of Truth" and is shown the very limits of knowledge, visits an "Error Bar" run by shady rats, and eventually makes friends with a mysterious walrus. When she stumbles upon a climate conference that mutates into an absurd court hearing, she is forced to take a stand. Together with a companion rabbit and the albatross Molly Mauk, a wind-and-weather expert, Alice is caught in a battle between logic, poetry and treason. The girl’s empathy nearly seals her fate. Eventually, however, spectacular powers weigh in to save her. [2]

It is Boysen's first novel. It is loosely based on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; the author who is a geologist by training, leads PIK’s "Artist in Residence programme".

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Boysen, Margret (17 March 2016). "'Alice, the Zeta Cat and Climate Change: A fairytale about the truth' Alice, the Zeta Cat and Climate Change". Edition Rugerup. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Explaining Climate Science with a Climate Fairy Tale". UNFCCC. 31 March 2017. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 27 November 2017.