Entries by Philip Turner

Celebrating Publication of “Body Weather: Notes on Chronic Illness in the Anthropecene” and Remembering Dr. Paul Epstein’s “Changing Planet, Changing Health”

In 2024, I was invited to serve as a juror on a three-judge panel that evaluated 99 entries for the Works-in-Progress Awards of the J. Anthony Lukas Prizes, sponsored by the Columbia Journalism School and the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard. After months of reading the book proposals and sample chapters, and many Zoom discussions among the three panelists, we announced a shortlist of fifteen works-in-progress; then following more discussion, we chose two works-in-progress as the finalists, whose authors would each receive $25,000. The works-in-progress awardees were Body Weather: Notes on Illness in the Anthropocene by Lorraine Boissoneault (to be published by Beacon Press), which was my favorite among all the entries, and The Life and Death of the American Worker: The Immigrants Taking on America’s Largest Meatpacking Company by Alice Driver (forthcoming from One Signal, Atria).

We drafted a citation for Body Weather, which was a product of me and my fellow panelists, Chris Jackson, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief, One World Publishing, Penguin Random House, and Erika Hayasaki, Professor at the University of California, Irvine, in the Literary Journalism Program, and author of Somewhere Sisters: A Story of Adoption, Identity and the Meaning of Family:

Body Weather is a visceral work of reported essays, masterfully braided with narrative research. Lorraine Boissoneault tells the story of living with chronic illness at a time when the planet is in a state of dire suffering. Climate change is bringing more hurricanes, lightning, tornadoes, fires and landslides. How will a distressed planet affect stressed, ill or disabled bodies? In poetic and haunting prose, Boissoneault unearths intersections between her unique experience living with illness, while also illuminating universal questions lodged within all of us: How do we learn to live with discomfort? “How do we seek refuge from our own bodies, from weather that wraps itself around the world?” The Lukas Prize will enable the author to travel from her home base in Chicago to the Saguenay fjord in northern Quebec, to Death Valley in California and to Australia’s outback to complete reporting for the book. Body Weather is a singular work of literary reportage, a firsthand, intimate account drawing profound connections between the body and the planet.

We were originally scheduled to present the awards in a ceremony at Columbia in May 2024, but due to months of strife on the school’s campus on the upper west side of Manhattan  following the Hamas attack in Israel on October 7, 2023, and the war that followed by Israel, the event was postponed. It was finally held a year later, in conjunction with the 2025 honorees, when I was excited to finally meet Lorraine Boissoneault. It was a thrill to introduce myself to her, and tell her I’d been a Lukas Prize juror and explain that her proposed book had first landed in my tranche of thirty-three proposals that I was to read and assess. She had traveled to NYC from Illinois. I found her a charming, soft-spoken person with a friendly twinkle in her eye. She told me that though her manuscript was still unfinished, she was confident of completing it, and that the monetary award was helping with the process, which made me very glad.

A few weeks ago I was delighted to get a message from Ms Boissoneault who informed me that she had indeed completed her book, and Beacon Press would be publishing it on April 21 of this year. She offered to send me a copy, which arrived a few days ago, with a lovely inscription from her. I’ve begun reading it and am finding it as evocative and insightful as the book proposal and sample chapters were. The final structure of the book, which had been hinted at in the sample material, has proven to be ingenious as it oscillates deftly from personal prose about her own health and conditions to reporting on the wider environment as it affects the health of the world’s population. Divided into five parts—Temperature-Thyroid-Denial is Part One—her first chapter is “When the Weather Has Teeth.” I was intrigued to learn she was born in Toledo, Ohio, a city know well, as I grew up in Cleveland, and had a set of grandparents and other relatives there. Her sentences convey a sense of reality lived with the weather as a factor influencing one’s life. Body Weather is a significant achievement, a rare memoir that is also a carefully reported book on personal, public, and planetary health.

An Earlier Imperative Book on Public and Planetary Health

Twenty years ago—when I was working as an editorial executive for Carroll & Graf Publishers, and always on the search for truth-tellers who might be the right person to write a book on an urgent topic—I listened to an interview by Terry Gross  on “Fresh Air” with a doctor/scientist whose outlook on the environment and impending changes in earth’s climate began to alter the way I view the planet. I was transfixed and shocked by what her guest, Paul Epstein, MD, MPH, discussed with her. He told her about emerging effects of climate change on people’s health. With three examples, he described the advent of unprecedented conditions:

  • 1)-Malarial mosquitoes populating at high elevations in Africa, where they were not previously known to breed;
  • 2)-Ticks occurring at latitudes where they also were not known before, fueling the growth of Lyme disease and West Nile virus;
  • 3)-Petroleum particulates attaching to ragweed that was proliferating because of increased CO2 in the atmosphere, which lodged in the airways of populations proximate to gas- and diesel-powered vehicles, making many people, including children, chronically asthmatic.

I quickly decided to contact Dr Epstein and see if he wanted to write a book on this imperative subject and his trailblazing research. When I called him in his office at Harvard, he was very open to speaking with me, though he couldn’t have known for certain I was legit, and he didn’t have a literary agent. It would take a couple years, and a job change for me to a new company, Union Square Press at Sterling Publishing, but I finally paired him with a co-author, science writer Dan Ferber, and commissioned a book that would be titled Changing Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do About It.

At some point, we met up when Paul was in New York for meetings with officers at foundations, and executives who worked in a subset of the insurance industry; this was a field, also new to me called “re-insurance.” These were hugely-capitalized insurers that themselves insure all the major insurance companies, backstopping the policies the insurers must sometimes pay on, especially after natural disasters when claims can run up to tens and hundreds of millions of dollars. Beginning in the 1990s-early 2000s, Paul who had an analytical mind, had already seen that a future of devastating storms, floods, and wildfires was going to place the balance sheets of insurers under major stress, and even pose a major threat to the future world economy, where insurability undergirds many aspects of modern commercial society—real estate and home ownership in this country, for one. Swiss Re Group was one of the companies whose officers he met with in Manhattan. His advocacy was intended to make them work ever harder to communicate to all levels of the corporate world that preventative measures must be taken to undercut climate change and the surging growth of mega-storms.

We met at a restaurant in Chelsea and sat wrapt while he told me about the places he’d worked as a doctor, including Angola and Mozambique, and the granting institutions and foundations he was enlisting to donate to climate initiatives. He held a position as Associate Director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment of the Harvard Medical School; earlier he had worked as a physician trained in tropical health. As one capstone to his career, he also worked with the UN’s International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2007.

In late 2008, Paul and Dan had delivered virtually the entire manuscript, and I’d nearly completed my full edit of it, when at the nadir of the recession in 2009, Sterling closed Union Square Press, my job was eliminated, the imprint shuttered, and their book contract canceled. Fortunately, Ferber’s agent was able to resell the book and it was finally published in April 2011 by the University of California Press, with endorsements from Dr Paul Farmer (RIP), Al Gore, Bill McKibben, and Elizabeth Kolbert. Paul sent me a copy with a personal inscription that I’m proud to share below. I sent him congratulations and we shared the satisfaction of knowing that after five years the book was at last making its way into the world.

Sadly, I learned soon after this that Paul had been ill for some time. I learned of his death, age 67, on November 20, 2011, in Cambridge, MA. I am still so sorry for the loss of Paul but so grateful for the chance to have known him and worked with him. It was a personal loss, and a global one. The path toward the signing of the Paris Climate Change Accord was well underway when he died, as it was then signed in 2015, with the USA a signatory to it, as well, which was the last year of President Obama’s second term. Many corporations, even companies associated with oil, were beginning to shift their priorities toward management of climate change risk, mitigation of public health harms from climate disruption seemed an attainable goal, and renewable energy was emerging. Lamentably, Obama’s immediate successor would peremptorily pull our country out of the Paris agreement and in his second term is doing even more to reverse progress. Paul would be deeply disappointed to know of that. And yet, his many humanistic contributions to our society endure. His exemplary life was chronicled in a New York Times obituary, in a Toledo Blade column by Tom Henry, and in this message from Physicians for Human Rights, which concluded with these words:

“For several generations of medical students and young professionals, [Paul Epstein] was a model of the physician activist, caring for the individual, one patient at a time, and at the same time crusading for the world so that we might leave behind us a chance for the health and well-being of entire populations and of the planet itself. His knowledgeable and daring voice inspired countless health professionals and activists to campaign for basic human rights, to ban landmines, to prevent disease, and to preserve the planet. We will always remember opening up the paper and reading yet another important piece from Paul—he will be sorely missed.”

It was a privilege to work with one pioneer for public health, Paul Epstein, and help him to develop his book, and equally an honor to discover the work of Lorraine Boissoneault, disability advocate and environment journalist, and also help her on her path to publication.

Desmond Morris, Bestselling Author on Primate Behavior, RIP

In turning to the NY Times’ Obituary section today, I see that a bestselling author for many decades, Desmond Morris, has died, age 98. Douglas Martin has written an excellent obituary headlined, “Desmond Morris, 98, Dies; Explored Humans’ Animal Instincts in ‘The Naked Ape,’” linked to here (no paywall).

My wife Kyle Gallup and I had the good fortune to meet Mr. Morris in Oxford, England, in 1991, when I was republishing two of his most popular books, The Human Zoo and The Naked Ape as part of the Kodansha Globe nonfiction trade paperback imprint, a series I headed up, which focused on books of natural history, cross-cultural studies, anthropology, adventure, and beyond. It was a  sort of nonfiction precursor to the NYRB series of today.

Kyle and I happened to be visiting Britain and traveled from London to see Morris in Oxford, where we also were meeting a librarian I knew at the famous university, A. J. Flavell. After Mr Flavell gave us a fascinating tour of the Bodleian Library, including its many stacks below ground level, we met up with Desmond, who offered to drive us around Oxford’s picturesque environs in a cream-colored Rolls Royce he owned. He was a very gracious host.

Douglas Martin reports that Morris “graduated with highest honors in zoology from the University of Birmingham in 1951. By the early 1950s, he was selling his surrealist paintings in London and Belgium and had directed two surrealist films. Dr. Morris subsequently attended the University of Oxford, where he studied under the animal behaviorists and future Nobel laureates Nikolaas Tinbergen, Karl von Frisch and Konrad Lorenz [Kodansha Globe would also publish Lorenz’s book Man Meets Dog]. Dr. Morris received a doctorate in 1954 with a thesis titled “The Reproductive Behavior of the Ten-Spined Stickleback.” Martin adds that Morris became curator of mammals at the London Zoo in 1959. Though he became a popularizer of serious science, he definitely had the full academic background to go with it.

Arguably, his books mainstreamed the study of animal and human behavior like no writer before him had done. As mentioned, he also was a painter and also made a study of the question of possible picture-making among non-human primates. In 2018, he returned to art, publishing a book titled The Lives of the Surrealists. I was privileged to work with him back in the day.

Some Thoughts for Passover—”What Price Freedom?”

I’m sharing an essay I wrote in 1995 for the weekly newsletter of B’Nai Jeshurun, a synagogue congregation where I was then active, titled “What Price Freedom?” In it I sought to understand and explain why in the Passover narrative God continually hardens Pharaoh’s heart, and why the plagues then descend on the Egyptians, right up to the tenth plague when their firstborn children die. To summarize my argument, I’ll cite these lines from the second paragraph:

“I believe that God was determined to utterly break the back of the dictatorship and enact a greater liberation than could have been achieved if Pharaoh had simply let the captive Israelites go free when Moses first demanded their release. Indeed, had this occurred the Israelites would have left Mitzrayim [the narrow place], but the tyrannical state would have impressed some other poor souls into slavery, and the oppressive regime would have continued to hum along without a hitch in the gears of its evil machinery. Instead, by repeatedly hardening Pharaoh’s heart, and by upping the ante each time with increasingly devastating consequences, until God finally strikes deep into the heart of every Egyptian home… God creates an exodus that frees not only the Israelites, but also the mixed multitude (the “erev rav”) that benefits from God’s liberating deeds.”

Even with that distillation of my essay, I invite you to read it, attached herewith.

Two Poems, “Creature Comforts” and “Love’s Mantle”

I’m delighted that under the rubric “Two Poems to End the Winter, The Seaboard Review of Books has published two poems today, one of mine, “Creature Comforts,” and another, “Love’s Mantle,” by my friend and agency client Alexis Greene. “Creature Comforts” explores nature, the animal kingdom, the wild, and our place in the world vis-a-vis animals. It’s composed in rhyming verse, and was written as a series of reflections that came to me one day some years ago when I was on a walk with my black Labrador dog, Noah, pictured here, who was a boon companion of mine for a long time. It was a very rainy day and Noah sniffed a rabbit. That’s what moved me to write the poem.

“Love’s Mantle” by Alexis Greene explores themes adjacent to those in my poem, though in a different and distinctive manner. I believe she was moved to write it this past winter while she’s been contending with an illness, and I think she sees this poem as a kind of valedictory statement of hers, about life and how she views the world. I’ll add that earlier this year, Alexis published a personal essay about her lifelong experiences of live theater on this website, and on the website The Arts Fuse.

Below are the first two stanzas of “Creature Comforts”:

The tide washed over the driveway
Stirs in me a notion
How in such a live way,
Rain may play at being an ocean.

The asphalt sluice is shined a fluid black
While snow on the lawn holds one sogg’d rabbit track.
Snout wet, Noah sniffs the clue of rodent visitation
And careens in hope for a sign of the hare’s habitation.

Here are the first two stanzas of “Love’s Mantle”:

Snow descends in icy flakes,
Coating the hills and drifting ’round lakes.
Covering houses and fields and trees,
Snow whitens the world as far as you can see.

Cold to the touch.
Wet on your skin,
Snow, winter’s blanket,
Protects the life within.

Thanks for reading the rest of “Creature Comforts” and “Love’s Mantle” at The Seaboard Review of Books, linked to here.

Talking about Jim Harrison, w/Colum McCann and Todd Goddard

An exciting event coming on April 20, for friends interested in Devouring Time, the recently published biography of Jim Harrison. Novelist Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin—who knew Harrison well, and was one of 100 interviewees biographer Todd Goddard talked to for the book—will be in conversation with Todd, who is a client of Philip Turner Book Productions, at the NYPL Library’s Stavros Niarchos building, 455 Fifth Avenue, across the avenue and one block down from the Main Library Building, at 6:30 that evening, a Monday. Registration for the free program has just opened, with in-person attendance—and live streaming, so folks can watch from all over the country—linked to here.

I’m sure it will a great night, so hope to see you there!

“The Decline and Fall of the Metro Theater,” a Guest Post by Kyle Gallup with M. G. Turner

It’s an honor to have “The Decline and Fall of the Metro Theater,” a collage painting pictured here that was inspired by a landmark in my Manhattan neighborhood, now sold to a private collection. The collector requested an artist statement about the making of the piece which is also included here, as is a pertinent essay by my son M. G. Turner, an author whose short story collection City of Dark Dreams: Tales from Another New York, will be published in January 2027 by DarkWinter Press.