

Whoever was in charge of the weather had put a recall on blue and nailed up this mess of dirty white sky like a lousy drywall job.” “It was the same dull, stripped ceiling that had been up there last week, last month, forever. “You never knew which split second might be the zigzag bolt dividing all that went before from everything that comes next.” Don’t forget to share, comment, and like! I would like to end with a few wonderful quotes from the book. The characters are so real and personable that I felt like I was losing a friend when the story ended (Barbara: If you feel like doing a follow up story on Dellarobia then I would totally be okay with that). I might even go as far as saying some of her best. Kingsolver has some really great writing in this book. I really recommend this book as a must read not just because of its discussions on climate change, but also because this is a very well written book. Kingsolver provides opinions from both sides of the debate and also offers explanations for climate change in very accessible way. It is great to see popular literature address this issue in such a strong and meaningful way. We, as inhabitants of this planet need to be doing more to help reverse and slow down these effects. I am a firm believer that climate change is happening, now. Is it real? Is it lies? Kingsolver provides a rich discussion about climate change through a thread that ties her whole book together. Kingsolver does not stop there: she addresses one of the world’s most controversial topics to date: climate change. Each character seems to be trying to escape something: Dellabrobia wants to escape her marriage with Cub Hester wants to escape from the pain and guilt of giving up a child for adoption and Cub wants to escape the oppression he feels from his parents, Bear and Hester.

We do many things in our daily lives so we can pretend that the real and important things are either not that important or not there at all.īarbara Kingsolver addresses escapism through her beautiful characters Dellarobia, Cub, Preston, Dovey, Bobby, Hester, Bear, and Ovid. The idea of escapism is not something uncommon to most people and I bet I am not alone when I say that I read to forget. It reconnected me to the world, which is a strange thing for me since I usually read to escape. It was a refreshing notion that made the story feel personal and very real. The book cover has orange butterflies on it on a light blue background.įlight Behaviour reminded me that I have not read enough books set in today’s world.

Book cover of Flight Behaviour by Barbara Kingsolver.
