hamishmacdonald.com

home of the 'zine novel.

hamishmacdonald.com

home of the 'zine novel.

hamishmacdonald.com

home of the 'zine novel.

hamishmacdonald.com

home of the 'zine novel.

A light-hearted climate change adventure story about an insurance salesman at the end of the world.

After a thirty-year rationing plan called “The Effort” the prime minister declares VC Day: “Victory over the Climate”. But chronically depressed insurance salesman Jeremy Chutter knows it’s all hot air. The end is nigh — and he can’t wait!

Then Jeremy’s world gets turned upside-down…

Climate change: you can’t go a day without hearing about it in the news: An ice shelf breaks off somewhere, another species becomes extinct, someplace else is on fire.

With all the alarming events and emotionally charged bickering for and against the science, it's easy to go numb. But the issue is far too important for that.

I wanted to figure out what I thought about the topic – since I was going to be inundated with it anyway. The best way I knew to do that was through a story, fully imagining "What if?" about it all, going beyond the debate, deeper into what this might really all be about for us together and as individuals.

So I wrote Finitude. Hopefully it’s a fun ride, even though it’s set against this looming iceberg of a subject. The real challenge was getting it finished before everything in it actually happened!
Author Hamish MacDonald's indie published novel, Finitude

"A coherent, lively and fast-moving attempt to put a widely feared future into imaginative, fictional form."

Readers say...

Danny Bloom, climate activist
Sandra Alland, performance poet
Liz Holt, copywriter and author (LizHolt.co.uk)
Lara Celini, former Development Manager, Scottish Green Party
Janet Swim, Professor of Psychology, Pennsylvania State University

Inspiration from Grist.com:


"What the warming world needs now is art, sweet art… Where are the books? The poems? The plays? The goddamn operas?" Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature, has called for playwrights, poets and artists to create works which will place climate change deeply in the imagination.

"If the scientists are right, we’re living through the biggest thing that’s happened since human civilization emerged. One species, ours, has by itself in the course of a couple of generations managed to powerfully raise the temperature of an entire planet, to knock its most basic systems out of kilter. But oddly, though we know about it, we don’t know about it. It hasn’t registered in our gut; it isn’t part of our culture."