No Small Endeavor with Lee C. Camp

251: Unabridged Interview: Kim Stanley Robinson

Mar 6, 2026
Kim Stanley Robinson, acclaimed sci-fi author of the Mars trilogy and The Ministry for the Future, reflects on climate dread and pragmatic hope. He discusses realistic utopias as ongoing processes. He highlights everyday people, scientific devotion, communal action, and reverence for the biosphere. The conversation balances fear with grounded, collective paths toward less suffering.
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ANECDOTE

Opening With An Unadaptable Heatwave

  • Robinson opened The Ministry for the Future with a deadly wet-bulb heatwave to show some climate impacts can't be adapted to.
  • He set that disaster in India and then kept the narrative grounded there to honor the victims and show practical responses.
INSIGHT

Hope Grounded In Collective Action

  • Robinson balances fear and hope: climate dread is valid but should fuel action, not despair.
  • He points to the accelerating clean-energy transition as a realistic route to avoid worst-case trajectories.
ADVICE

Model Complexity With Mixed Forms

  • Use mixed literary forms to model messy real-world problem solving rather than tidy plans.
  • Robinson deliberately blends essays, eyewitness fragments, and narration to show climate solutions emerge from many small attempts.
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