Description:
Nathan is scared and uncertain. As developers close in and climate change looms, he must decide if the compost heap's creature is right. The town and civilisation are at risk-and it's up to him.
Brief description: Michael Dwyer grew up in secure Australia, spending school holidays on a country farm. As a young man, he lived for a time as a foreigner in Europe, working alongside illegal immigrants and hippies. On his return to Australia, he studied computing, public administration, and business, as well as learning about permaculture, world oil supply (peak oil), and its massive implications. Always impressed by the ideas in science fiction, Michael is puzzled by civilisation's myth surrounding the future. With a deeply sceptical view of economic growth in perpetuity and the assumption of eight billion people living happily on a planet with declining resources and an increasingly changing climate, he holds fears for the continuation of civilisation.Now retired, he loves bike riding and has ridden across Australia both south to north and west to east. He has a regular routine of sporty rides with friends. He has a passion for growing food and is involved in organic food growing in the local community garden, building resilience in the local community. Michael has an intense desire to find a path to a thriving living planet with a realistic plan for civilisation to continue for at least five hundred years.
Review Quotes:
"The dangerous Earth Spirit argues with the hero - from a Compost Heap. At issue is the continuation of life on this planet. References to war and the role of energy supply/oil are real to me raised as I was in Lithuania and conscripted into the Russian/USSR army. In this fantasy story the issues of war, refugees, climate change and world oil supply make the author's predictions ring very true in this day and age."
Paul Povilas Banaitis, Grassroots Environmentalist, Professional in Education for Sustainability, Vievis, Lithuania