289 Global Ecologies and the Environmental Humanities: Postcolonial Approaches, edited by Elizabeth DeLoughrey, Jill Didur, and Anthony Carrigan. New York: Routledge, 2015. Luca Raimondi Affiliate Researcher, Department of English King’s College London, United Kingdom E-mail: luca.raimondi@kcl.ac.uk “[T]he climate crisis,” writes Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh in his latest book, The Great Derangement, “is also a crisis of culture, and thus of the imagination. […] This culture is, of course, intimately linked with the wider histories of imperialism and capitalism that have shaped the world” (Ghosh 2016, pp. 9-10). Ghosh’s assertion, which mobilizes at once the stories, history, and politics of climate change, resonates with the central arguments that animate DeLoughrey, Didur, and Carrigan’s Global Ecologies and the Environmental Humanities: that “the history of globalization and imperialism is integral to understanding contemporary environmental issues” (p. 2), and that “focusing on how to narrate both ecological crisis and utopian visions is vital” (p. 4) to conjuring up and articulating our future. The volume constitutes a collective intellectual endeavour to delineate a “postcolonial environmental humanities,” of which the introduction provides, if not a manifesto, then at least an agenda of sorts. The editors Localities, Vol. 7, 2017, pp. 289-295 http://dx.doi.org/10.15299/local.2017.11.7.289