Seattle Rep presents THE CHILDREN by Lucy Kirkwood from February 7 to March 15, 2020. Librarians at Seattle Public Library created this resource list of books and films to enhance your experience of the show.
The Children
The script of THE CHILDREN, for your reading pleasure.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View The ChildrenWho's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
THE CHILDREN’s Rose, Hazel and Robin’s tension-laden interactions are similar to (but not quite as shocking as) those featured in Albee’s infamous play.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?Oryx and Crake
Set in the near future, this post-apocalyptic novel explores an Earth ravaged by ecological and scientific disaster. First in a trilogy.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View Oryx and CrakeManual for Survival
Brown's research led to the exposé of a chilling cover-up of Chernobyl's true effects on both humans and the environment.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View Manual for SurvivalSilent Spring
"First published in 1962, Silent Spring alerted a large audience to the environmental and human dangers of indiscriminate use of pesticides, spurring revolutionary changes in the laws affecting our air, land, and water." – Publisher’s copy.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View Silent SpringFukushima
Reporter Mark Willacy visits the contaminated zone surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, which was destroyed in the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami of 2011. The power plant catastrophe in THE CHILDREN is modeled after the real-life Fukushima disaster.
Format: Streaming Video
View FukushimaMidnight in Chernobyl
"While Chernobyl often gets portrayed as a small piece within the larger collapse of the USSR, this work aims to reset that notion by pointing out that the disaster solidified mistrust toward the Communist Party and Soviet system and that the recovery costs bankrupted the Soviet economy."--Library Journal
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View Midnight in ChernobylFukushima
Leading experts from the Union of Concerned Scientists team up with a journalist to determine exactly what led to the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View FukushimaMarch Was Made of Yarn
Published a year after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, this anthology contains 18 essays and stories by Japanese authors reflecting on this devastating event and its aftermath.
Format: Book
Availability: Available
View March Was Made of YarnA Tale for the Time Being
An author in the Pacific Northwest discovers the diary of a Japanese teen named Nao in ocean debris, possibly from the 2011 tsunami and subsequent Fukushima nuclear disaster, which has washed ashore near her British Columbia home.
Format: Book
Availability: All copies in use
View A Tale for the Time Being