BOOKMONGER ‘A code red for humanity’ Author writes poems about a changing planet In August, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report that involved hundreds of scientists from 66 countries around the globe. In unequivocal terms, the report stated that the changes we’ve observed in our cli- mate over the last couple of decades are unprecedented in thousands, possibly even hundreds of thousands of years. According to the report, some changes are irreversible over the next several hundred years, such as continued sea level rise. However, the report notes that dramatic and committed reductions in carbon dioxide emissions still could have a benefi cial impact on stabilizing global temperatures. United Nations Secretary-General Antó- nio Guterres has called this “a code red for humanity.” Authors around the region have been tak- ing this threat seriously for years, and have This week’s book ‘Between River & Street’ by Scott T. Starbuck MoonPath Press — 114 pp — paperback, $16 written about it in various genres. Battle Ground, Washington, writer Scott T. Starbuck is one of those. For the bet- ter part of a decade, he has written his blog “Trees, Fish, and Dreams Climateblog,” which tackles many of the issues surround- ing climate change in the Pacifi c Northwest and beyond. He has readers in more than 110 countries around the globe. Starbuck also has taught ecopoetry workshops at the uni- versity level. Now he has a new book of poetry that addresses climate change and how it is adversely aff ecting the lives of all who are CREEKS AND RIVERS FLUSH THROUGH THIS POETRY VOLUME, AS DOES THE OCEAN TIDE. YOU MAY FIND YOURSELF WATERING THE PAGES WITH SALTWATER TEARS OF YOUR OWN. ‘BETWEEN RIVER & STREET’ PROVIDES STARK TESTAMENT TO OUR TIMES. accustomed to living in this particularly lush and wonderful part of the world. Published by MoonPath Press, the book is titled “Between River & Street.” Even the evocative black and white photograph on this slender volume’s cover of the Asto- ria Bridge soaring over abandoned pilings below hints at the potency of transitions and the gray areas in between. Starbuck intersperses poems about bucolic Northwest settings like “Wild Straw- berries,” “Lights in Doug Fir ” and “A Spell of Birds and Fish” with darker observations about the constructs of modern civilization that encroach upon those places. “Remembering Rocky Creek” is a three- part, four-page poem about how “… land and sky / migrations of men / replace the ancient ones of animals.” And how gray concrete pools that Starbuck calls “mod- ern salmon ranches” now substitute for rush- ing creeks where salmon “once planted the secret life of the race / beneath autumn leaves and pebbles ….” In another poem, “Salmonspeak,” he writes: ‘Between River & Street’ is written by Scott T. Starbuck. Maybe we never needed gray raceways / and 5 gallon plastic buckets / to propagate our race. Or maybe we’re beyond the point for remedial eff orts for any of us. Starbuck’s poem, “Tsunami,” is a wrenching realization that there is nowhere left to run. Creeks and rivers fl ush through this poetry volume, as does the ocean tide. You may fi nd yourself watering the pages with saltwater tears of your own. “Between River & Street” provides stark testament to our times. The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMichael, who writes this weekly column focusing on the books, authors and publish- ers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Contact her at barbaralmcm@gmail.com NEW GO KART TRACK NOW OPEN! GO KARTS MINI GOLF GYROXTREME ROCK WALL KIDDIE RIDES AND MORE! SEASIDE, OREGON HWY 101 (1/4 mi South of Seaside) • 2735 S. Roosevelt • 503-738-2076 OPEN DAILY 11 A M T O 6 P M 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM