Our house is on fire Scenes of a family and a planet in crisis

Greta Thunberg, 2003-

Book - 2020

"When climate activist Greta Thunberg was eleven, her parents, Malena and Svante, and her little sister, Beata, were facing a crisis in their own home. Greta had stopped eating and speaking, and her mother and father had reconfigured their lives to care for her. Desperate and searching for answers, her parents discovered what was at the heart of Greta's distress: her imperiled future on a rapidly heating planet. Steered by Greta's determination to understand the truth and generate change, they began to see the deep connections between their own suffering and the planet's. Written by a remarkable family and told through the voice of an iconoclastic mother, Our House Is On Fire is the story of how they fought their problem...s at home by taking global action. And it is the story of how Greta decided to go on strike from school, igniting a worldwide rebellion." -- From back cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Autobiographies
Published
[New York] : Penguin Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House [2020].
Language
English
Swedish
Main Author
Greta Thunberg, 2003- (author)
Other Authors
Svante Thunberg, 1969- (translator), Malena Ernman, Beata Ernman, Paul R. Norlén, Saskia Vogel
Item Description
Originally published in Swedish as Scener ur hjärtat by Bokförlaget Polaris, Stockholm.
Copyright ©2018 by Malena Ernman, Svante Thunberg, Greta Thunberg, Beata Ernman, and Bokförlaget Polaris. Translation copyright ©2020 by Paul Norlen and Saskia Vogel.
Physical Description
279 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780143133575
  • Preface
  • Part I. Behind the Curtain
  • Part II. Burned-out People on a Burned-out Planet
  • Part III. The Ancient Drama
  • Part IV. Imagine If Life Is for Real and Everything We Do Means Something
  • Thanks...
Review by Booklist Review

The personal is political, but even more fundamentally the personal is environmental. Every human is dependent on the biosphere, yet, in spite of dire warnings about fossil fuels and global warming, we've failed to mobilize. Enter a young Swedish activist, Greta Thunberg, who, with preternatural poise and deep, lucid understanding of climate change and the urgency it demands, courageously speaks truth to power. So clarion is Greta's uncompromising call to action, Time magazine named her Person of the Year, and now this blazingly candid family memoir reveals the grueling and bewildering struggles that propelled Greta onto the world stage. When we first meet her, she is unable to eat or speak, battered by bullying and in shock over environmental abominations. After much anguish and effort and a diagnosis which includes Asperger's, Greta slowly regains her strength, forges her conviction, and embarks on the school strike outside the Swedish parliament which launched her galvanizing global campaign. Narrated primarily by her mother, opera singer Malena Ernman, with passages from Greta, her sister, and their father, and written in brief, hard-hitting "scenes," this is an unnerving and profoundly enlightening chronicle of the symbiosis between human and planetary health as manifest within one remarkable family whose painful awakening to our "acute sustainability crisis" should embolden us all.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A collective portrait of activist Greta Thunberg's family, encompassing not only climate change, but also issues of mental health. In this moving text, Swedish opera singer Malena Ernman, her husband, Svante Thunberg, and their daughters, Greta and Beata, stitch together vignettes about "burned-out people on a burned out planet." Before Greta stepped into the public eye with her 2018 strike outside the Swedish Parliament, she had fallen into depression. Ernman details the end of her music career, when Greta refused to eat or speak. Through distilled recollections, she elucidates how autism and selective mutism unfolded in her household, with all its initial hardship, and how Swedish society views spectrum disorders in general. When Greta was finally diagnosed with Asperger's and OCD, and Beata with ADHD and other conditions, the family found a measure of solace. But they still struggled: "We scream. We kick down doors. We scratch. We pound walls. We wrestle. We cry. We ask for help and we somehow endure." The narrative delivers a potent, challenging, and heartening portrayal of a family's struggle to hold it all together. The text is more problematic when it conflates environmental issues--such as sustainability and the climate crisis--with mental health problems, positing that society's prioritization of economy over ecology has led to increasing isolation and desperation. While provocative, the argument feels grounded in simplified conviction. Passages about carbon emissions, damage wrought by air travel, the failure of world leaders to take charge, and related issues are unabashedly alarmist and valuable. Because these elements echo Greta's many speeches, they come off as repetitive in the book. The buildup to Greta's strike--and the strike itself--is an inspiring depiction of the teen who has become a leader on the world stage and of the family who supports her behind the scenes. It also represents a courageous triumph over many of her demons. An impassioned call to action and a vulnerable family portrait of neurodiversity. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Preface  This could have been my story. An autobiography of sorts, had I been so inclined. But autobiographies don't really interest me. There are other more important things.   This story was written by Svante and me together with our daughters, and it's about the crisis that struck our family. It's about Greta and Beata. But above all it's about the crisis that surrounds and affects us all. The one we humans have created through our way of life: beyond sustainability, divorced from nature, to which we all belong. Some call it over-consumption, others call it a climate crisis. The vast majority seem to think that this crisis is happening somewhere far away from here, and that it won't affect us for a very long time yet. But that's not true. Because it's already here and it's happening around us all the time, in so many different ways. At the breakfast table, in school corridors, along streets, in houses and apartments. In the trees outside your window, in the wind that ruffles your hair. Perhaps some of the things that Svante and I, along with the children, decided to share here, after considerable delibera- tion, should have been saved for later. Once we had more distance. Not for our sake, but for yours. No doubt this would have been perceived as more accept- able. A bit more agreeable. But we don't have that kind of time. To have a fighting chance, we have to put this crisis in the spotlight right now.   A few days before this book was first published in Sweden in August 2018, our daughter Greta Thunberg sat down outside the Swedish Parliament and began a school strike for the climate - a strike that is still going on today, on Mynttorget in the Old Town in Stockholm, and in many places around the world. Since then a lot has changed. Both for her and for us as a family. Some days it's almost like a fairy tale. A saga. But that's a story for another book. This story is about the road to Greta's school strike. The road to 20 August 2018.   Malena Ernman, November 2018   P.S. Before this book was published we announced that any money we might earn from it would go to Greenpeace, the World Wildlife Fund, and other non-profit organizations, through a foundation we've set up. And that's how it is. Because that's what Greta and Beata have decided. I Behind the Curtain   Elegy   For the day wears on. The sun will die at seven. Speak up, experts on darkness, who will brighten us now? Who turns on a Western backlight, who dreams an Eastern dream? Someone, anyone, bring a lantern! Preferably you. - Werner Aspenström   Scene 1. One Last Night at the Opera   It's places, everyone. The orchestra tune their instruments one last time and the lights go down in the hall. I'm standing next to the conductor, Jean-Christophe Spinosi, we're just about to walk through the stage door and take our positions. Everyone is happy tonight. It's the final performance, and tomorrow we all get to go home to our loved ones. Or on to the next job. Home to France, Italy and Spain. Home to Oslo and Copenhagen. On to Berlin, London and New York. The last few performances have felt like being in a trance. Anyone who has ever worked on stage knows what I mean. Sometimes there is a kind of flow, an energy that builds in the interaction between stage and audience and sets off a chain reaction that unfolds from performance to performance, from night to night. It's like magic. Theatre and opera magic. And now we're at the final performance of Handel's Xerxes at the Artipelag arts centre in the Stockholm archipelago. It is 2 November 2014, and on this evening I will sing my last opera in Sweden. But no one is aware of that. Including me. This evening I will sing my last opera ever. The atmosphere is electric, and everyone backstage is walk- ing on air, a few centimetres above Artipelag's brand new concrete floor. They are filming as well. Eight cameras and a full-scale production team are recording the performance. Through the stage door you can hear the sound of 900 silent people. The King and Queen are in attendance. Everyone is there. I'm pacing back and forth. I'm trying to breathe, but I can't. My body seems to want to twist to the left and I'm sweating. My hands are falling asleep. The last seven weeks have been one long nightmare. Nowhere is there the slightest bit of calm. I feel sick, yet beyond nausea. Like a drawn-out panic attack. As if I had slammed right into a glass wall and got stuck mid-air as I was falling to the ground. I'm waiting for the thud. Waiting for the pain. I'm waiting for blood, broken bones and the wail of ambulances. But nothing happens. All I see is myself suspended in the air in front of that bloody glass wall, which just stands there with- out the slightest crack. 'I'm not feeling well,' I say. 'Sit down. Do you want some water?' We're speaking French, the conductor and I. Suddenly my legs give out. Jean-Christophe catches me in his arms. 'It's fine,' he says. 'We'll delay the performance. They can wait. We'll blame it on me, I'm French. We're always late.' Someone laughs. I really have to hurry home after the performance. My younger daughter, Beata, is turning nine tomorrow and I have a thousand things to take care of. But now I am where I am. Unconscious, in the arms of the conductor. Typical. Someone caresses my forehead. Cut to black. Scene 2. The Ironworks   I grew up in a terrace house in the small, northern town of Sandviken, Sweden. Mum was a deacon and Dad worked as an accountant at the Sandvik ironworks. I have a sister, Vendela, three years my junior, and a brother, Karl-Johan. Mum named him after the Swedish baritone Carl-Johan 'Loa' Falkman because she thought Loa was so handsome. This was the extent of the connection to opera and classical music I had at home. We did like to sing though. We sang a lot. Folk music, ABBA, John Denver. All in all we were just another small- town Swedish family. The only thing that might have set us apart was my parents' involvement with vulnerable people. In our little home on Ekostigen, on the outskirts of the Vallhov neighbourhood, humanitarianism reigned - if some- one needed help it was our duty to try to offer that help to them. My mother carried on this family tradition from her father, Ebbe Arvidsson, who was a high-up official in the Church of Sweden and a pioneer in ecumenism and modern aid work. So in my younger years I often found myself living under the same roof as refugees and undocumented immigrants. It could be a bit chaotic at times. But it worked out fine. Whenever we travelled somewhere it was always to visit my mother's best friend, who was a nun; we spent several summers at her convent in the north of England. This is prob- ably why I swear so much on stage. The habit must stem from a sort of chronic childhood tendency towards rebellion, which I don't think I'll ever quite shake. But apart from the fact that we spent our summers in the dormitories of English convents and that we had refugees liv- ing in the garage, we were just like everyone else.   As I said, we sang, and I loved to sing. I sang all the time. I sang everything and anything - the harder the piece, the more fun it was. Much later, when I chose to become an opera singer, it was probably for the simple fact that I love a challenge. After all, nothing was harder or more fun than singing opera. Excerpted from Our House Is on Fire: Scenes of a Family and a Planet in Crisis by Greta Thunberg, Svante Thunberg, Malena Ernman, Beata Ernman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.