Amicability of Nature: Embracing Profound Environment in Barbara Kingsolver's Prodigal Summer

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R. Abinaya , S. Meena Rani

Abstract

Barbara Kingsolver, a recognized American writer, novelist, and brief tale essayist, is known for her scholarly investigation of subjects like civil rights, biodiversity, and the unpredictable connection among mankind and the encompassing biological systems. One of her prominent books, Prodigal Summer, distributed in 2000, drenches peruse in the embroidery of a little Appalachian town during a solitary, hot summer. Through three interconnected accounts of love, misfortune, and family, the novel unfurls against the rich wild of the Kentucky mountains. Prodigal Summer remains as a demonstration of Kingsolver's capacity in entwining the human involvement in the many-sided magnificence of the regular world.


This paper plans to dig into the appearances of profound biology in the clever Prodigal Summer, explicitly trying to disentangle the unpredictable associations among people and the non-human elements. Prominently, conversations inside the story centre around the existence of coyotes, moths, and chestnuts, which act as a medium that backers for the safeguarding of these species. Through different account strings, the creator accentuates the requirement for interconnectedness of all living and nonliving components. Prodigal Summer arises as a scholarly work with significant biological contemplations, and consequently proposes a profound environmental perusing of the book.

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