Everything That Rises: A Climate Change Memoir

A Ms. magazine “Most Anticipated Feminist Book of 2023”

Authentic and inspiring, Everything That Rises personalizes the realities of climate change by paralleling our relationship to the planet with the way we interact within our own homes.

Nineteen-year-old Brianna Craft is having a panic attack. A professor’s matter-of-fact explanation of the phenomenon known as “climate change” has her white-knuckling the table in her first environmental studies lecture. Out of her father’s house, she was supposed to be safe.

This moment changed everything for Brianna. For her first internship, she jumped at the chance to assist the Least Developed Countries Group at the United Nations’ negotiations meant to produce a new climate treaty. While working for those most ignored yet most impacted by the climate crisis, she grappled with the negligent indifference of those who hold the most power. This dynamic painfully reminded her of growing up in a house where the loudest voice always won and violence silenced those in need.

Four years later, Brianna witnessed the adoption of the first universal climate treaty, the Paris Agreement. In this memoir that blends the political with the personal, Brianna dives into what it means to advocate for the future, and for the people and places you love, all while ensuring your own voice doesn’t get lost in the process.

It will take all of us to protect our home.

“The most unusual and authentic book you will ever read on climate change…deeply personal, mysteriously exhilarating, and profoundly moving.” — Christiana Figueres, former executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

“A tour de force—an instant classic and a crucial addition to the literature of the environment…the best account yet from inside the global climate negotiations. It’s told from the most important and least acknowledged of viewpoints.” — Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature

“Irresistible…Brianna Craft powerfully embodies advocacy for all communities affected by environmental disaster in a story that is alternately harrowing and enchanting.” — Harriet A. Washington, author of A Terrible Thing to Waste: Environmental Racism and Its Assault on the American Mind