Guernica Magazine

Other Ways of Seeing

Mixing memoir, travelogue, and philosophy, Ben Ehrenreich examines how Western ideas of progress have led to environmental degradation.

The Twentynine Palms Highway snakes its way into the southern edge of the Mojave Desert through the Little San Bernardino Mountains. Angled at a low incline, it ascends gradually to high desert country. In Desert Notebooks: A Road Map for the End of Time, the journalist Ben Ehrenreich writes that every time he traversed this route, he would feel the tension fade away.

When I first drove up the road a few years ago, I too, in a way, felt at home. Driving through the foothills of the Little San Bernardino Mountains, I was reminded of a similar spot on a desert highway at the other end of the planet, in Pakistan’s southernmost province of Sindh—the place I call home. It was a site I had driven past all my life, on the long journey from the port city of Karachi to my ancestral village. There was nothing melodramatic about it: two hillocks flanking the M9 motorway as it curved through them. But the scene caught my attention as a child and continues to fascinate me to this day.

I encountered the same uplifting feeling, subtle beauty,

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