Blog Post #5
Reading Jenny Offil’s novel, “Weather” was very different from reading Ghosh’s novel “The Hungry Tide”. Both are discussing the Anthropocene, but have very different approaches. Offill’s novel follows the life of an average college librarian navigating everyday life, while also dealing with the struggles of taking care of others in her life, particularly her drug-addicted brother, her husband, and her son. She takes the job responding to podcast listeners about survival and climate dread, this only amplifies her anxiety about the future. Offill allows the reader to relate with the protagonist through her insecurities and anxieties. The novel centers on the looming threat of climate change and the pervasive dread it inspires, capturing the psychological toll of living in an era of ecological crisis.
Offill uses Lizzie as a character grappling with a sense of dread about the future, amplified by her anxieties of others who fear the world’s ecological fate. Her job working with Sylvia requires her to answer emails from people seeking guidance and reassurance amid their climate anxieties. The emails reveal a collective consciousness fixated on survival, from those asking “how to prepare for the apocalypse” to others fearing that it is “already too late” (Offill, Weather, p. 7). Lizzie being at this job causes her to absorb this dread, feeling the weight of the environmental crisis in a new and more immediate way. Lizzie’s reactions to these climate concerns illustrate how easily anxiety can take root, transforming into an omnipresent background hum of fear. Even as she tries to stay grounded, Lizzie admits to struggling with her sleep and inner calm. She confesses, “It’s the end of the world every day, for some people,” (p. 9), acknowledging that, for many, the crisis is not abstract or distant but an immediate threat. Through Lizzie’s observations, Offill shows how climate anxiety permeates modern consciousness, especially for those who can envision the bleak possibilities awaiting future generations.
The Hungry Tide and Weather both tackle the Anthropocene in different ways. Offill focuses more on the psychological toll, often isolating the nature of climate anxiety. Conversely, Ghosh focuses on how environmental policies and global inquiries shape the lives of those most vulnerable to ecological collapse. I feel Offill’s approach to the Anthropocene gives a different point of view that allows the reader to feel the anxiety and helplessness of climate change with limited means of escape. The existential crisis that is the Anthropocene is complex and affects not just the environment but psyches as well.



