fbpx
Loading Events

Book Talk Mariah Rigg Extinction Capital of the World

 

  • GET TICKETS
  • Public Program

  • Thursday, October 23, 5pm
  • $5
    Free for members
  • The Research & Development Store

Magnetic, haunting, and tender, Mariah Rigg’s Extinction Capital of the World is a stunning portrait of Hawai’i — and a powerful meditation on family, queer love, and community amid imperialism and environmental collapse.

By turns heartbreaking and hopeful, these stories of love, longing, and grief are fierce dispatches from a state haunted by the specter of colonization, a precious biome under constant threat. An older man grapples with the American-weapons research conducted on a neighboring island. A pregnant woman seeks belonging while poaching flowers in the rainforest with her partner’s mother. Two teenage girls find love during a summer spent on Midway Atoll. A young woman returns home following a breakup and reconnects with her estranged father and the island itself. Linked by both place and character, Rigg’s stories illuminate the exotification and commodification of Hawai’i in the American mythos.

Extinction Capital of the World is an environmental love letter to the Hawaiian Islands and an indelible portrayal of the people who inhabit them — marking the arrival of an exciting new voice in contemporary fiction.

About the Author:
Mariah Rigg is a Samoan-Haole settler who was born and raised on the island of O‘ahu. Her work has been featured in Oxford American, The Sewanee Review, Joyland, and elsewhere. In 2024, she was awarded a fellowship in creative writing from the National Endowment for the Arts. She holds an MFA from the University of Oregon and is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.