Notes
1 This review is not a disinterested evaluation but continues a conversation with the author. Full disclosure: I am thanked in the acknowledgments of the book. Mihnea and I met over a decade ago as budding PhD students in a week-long political science workshop, which resulted in both of us contributing to a book, Political Animals and Animal Politics (Wissenburg and Schlosberg Citation2014).
2 Intermezzo I (pp. 47–60) is an amazing tale of regional history and ongoing rural struggles, as well as an ontological and political reflection, via the act of pruning olive trees in Puglia. If you are not sure about reading a whole book, these pages are a great way to spend twenty minutes in public transport, or to offer to students in need of an inspiring and realistic response to global environmental unravelling.