A colorful collage of book covers on a grassy background. Titles include "A Psalm for the Wild-Built" and "Venomous Lumpsucker."

6 Contemporary Ecofiction Titles for Earth Month

Curated by librarian Allie McCormack


Ecofiction is a genre that roots itself in the interconnectedness of life. Rather than using nature merely as a setting, ecofiction treats the natural world and the threats it faces as central forces shaping plots and characters. While some authors ground their writing in the hard sciences, others use elements of speculative fiction, science fiction, magical realism, and mystery to prompt readers think beyond their own circumstances and consider the world as a whole. In honor of Earth Month, here are six novels published within the past decade to get you started in this wide-ranging genre.

Bright pink book cover for "Venomous Lumpsucker" by Ned Beauman. Features a textured, grey fish amid yellow seaweed.

Venomous Lumpsucker
By Ned Beauman

In the near future, corporations trade “extinction credits” for the right to cause environmental damage and kill entire species, preserving organisms’ DNA in biobanks that offer the hope of eventual resurrection. When a powerful cyberattack wipes the data from every biobank simultaneously, an animal cognition scientist and a corporate executive with a shameful secret team up to save a strange-looking, possibly intelligent fish from total destruction. As they travel across the world’s damaged landscapes, they must look beyond the fish itself to uncover who initiated the cyberattack and what it could mean for the future of the planet.

“Birnam Wood” book cover features bold white text on black background, with orange accents and tree silhouettes.

Birnam Wood
By Eleanor Catton

A guerilla gardening collective in Aotearoa New Zealand discovers a seemingly abandoned farm and decide to cultivate it in secret. However, a mysterious American billionaire also wishes to use the land to build a doomsday bunker. As the two parties negotiate an uneasy peace to share the property, their actions demonstrate how power, conviction, and self-interest can turn cooperation into a dangerous rivalry.

Book cover for “A Psalm for the Wild Built” features a robot in a lush forest with colorful flowers, and a person sitting outside a caravan.

A Psalm for the Wild-Built
By Becky Chambers

In a peaceful, post-industrial world, a “tea monk” named Dex travels between villages helping residents with minor conflicts and problems. Feeling dissatisfied with everyday life, Dex seeks out a remote monastery only to encounter Mosscap, a conscious robot whose kind have not been seen in hundreds of years. As they embark on a journey through the wilderness, the two explore ideas of fulfilment, abundance and the nature of life itself.

“How Beautiful We Were” book cover shows two sculpted arms with clasped hands are laid against a white background.

How Beautiful We Were
By Imbolo Mbue

The fictional African village of Kosawa is suffering devastating environmental and health consequences from decades of pollution by an American oil firm. As the villagers begin to revolt against corporate greed and governmental corruption, young people like recent college graduate Thula step up to lead the movement and push for justice. Through shifting perspectives that span lifetimes, the novel examines colonial legacies, collective resistance, and the cost of fighting systemic power.

“The Annual Migration of Clouds” features A black-and-white crow entangled in green vines lays against a white background.

The Annual Migration of Clouds
By Premee Mohamed

Reid Graham and her mother live a climate-ravaged Alberta, Canada, where a parasitic infection and ecological collapse have reshaped the world. When Reid receives an acceptance letter from Howse University, one of the few communities that has preserved the resources of pre-disaster society, she must weigh the opportunity to pursue education against the obligations she feels to her family and home. Meditating on the nature of responsibility and hope, Reid must decide for herself what it means to built a future in an unstable world.

“The Overstory” book cover shows giant trees in a forest with light filtering through. Text includes a Pulitzer Prize sticker.

The Overstory
By Richard Powers

This novel follows the lives of nine individuals, ranging from farmers to scientists to activists, whose lives are shaped and transformed by their connection to trees. As their stories interweave across generations, their personal histories, scientific discoveries, and philosophical awakenings lead these characters to confront industrial deforestation in a variety of ways. Combining an innovative structure, non-linear narrative, and poetical prose, the author prompts readers to consider humanity’s place in the natural world and humans’ responsibility to stand up for ecological justice.

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