Advance Praise
“Bouvier gives us a time-lapse view of time itself – all of it – from the big bang through the emergence of humans (music composes us) on to the present day, in which we are the aliens, and from there into an amortal future. His intricate and stunningly beautiful sentences are full of surprising scientific specificity, bringing us delicacies such as the first orbs of life lighting up the ocean and the inventions of mathematics, microscopes, telescopes and freedom of the press – all suddenly present all at once. It’s sleight of hand at its most poetic.” – Cole Swensen, author of Art in Time
“This is a marvellous book. Only an immensely fertile imagination could tell so elemental a tale in so straightforward yet evocative a fashion. Simple sentences often carry astounding weight. Bouvier makes one care about characters like ‘Life’ and ‘We’ and then the emergence of virtually all of the world’s major thinkers in cameo. Underlying this reach for epic status are many recurrent and interrelated themes, including a complex tale of how democracy originated and why it may be destroying itself, and a painful contrast between Petrarch’s Humanism to our present where scientific discoveries make possible a world in which ‘we will have gone from nothing, to us, to something not us.’” – Charles Altieri, UC Berkeley
“Even just glancing through Us from Nothing’s table of contents, I laughed aloud with excitement and awe, and let me tell you: the feeling never abated! In fact, it deepened with each turn of the page, each pithy song to the past (and near future), each revelation of mystery and meaning. Geoff Bouvier has written a tour through physics and biology and language and art and mathematics and sociology, to the point where such categorizations fall away into meaninglessness, and everything becomes, again, one. This book, like all great books, reframes reality, imagines unbelievable true stories and by doing so creates for us a richer way of apprehending the world.” – Patrick Madden, author of Disparates
“An encyclopedic epic after Eduardo Galeano, Us from Nothing takes on history in poetically compressed, paragraphic cantos. In conversation with cosmic origins as it connects with patterns, past events and pressing concerns, the whole corrects records and delights in telling a tale of the tribe. A contextualizing arrangement, part Blake, part Williams, wholly relational and delighting. ‘Our seers help us speak in nature’s speech. They tell us tales that show us who we are and why we’re here.’” – Hoa Nguyen, author of A Thousand Times You Lose Your Treasure