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About The Book
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A novel in the environmental literature genre Second Rising combines a mystery a love story and a fight against injustice. The narrator Lauren is a young chef who buys a restaurant in the town of Quicksilver in the Cascade Mountains of the Pacific Northwest. She soon becomes entangled in the communitys fight to preserve their farmlands and way of life which includes roaming the forests of nearby Mount Baker. A technology mogul has bought vast swathes of land for a project he keeps secret while wresting control of the local government and promising residents new jobs and prosperity. Aligned with international agribusiness he closes the forests and threatens the local organic farmer who supplies Laurens restaurant; even the local wild salmon run is endangered. As the community divides into bitter struggle some choose active resistance including a bombing and the suspicious death of the moguls security chief; but Lauren finds strength through her deepening connection to the land. Help arrives in mysterious ways: The towns legendary White Deer appears in the forest Tibetan monks arrive to make a mandala and spread its blessings and local Kulshan Indians arrange for Lauren to journey to the Southwest and bring back blue corn with an ancient heritage. Lauren is falling more in love with Grant a geologist who works for the tech mogul but must make an ethical break when he discovers his employers true motives. The community is also pulling together and while a reclusive shape-shifter is at work and a gemologist nurtures seeds from old amber more practical residents gather to organize a new city based on innovative ideas and approaches. Inspired by the question How shall we live if we truly believe the earth is alive? the characters are buoyed by energy that flows when they act as part of the earths living systems. Through struggles and crises the townspeople prevail in the optimistic conclusion. The novel 436 pages evokes motifs of European Asian and Native American mythologies and vividly describes the land mountain and rivers as characters themselves.