
When the deafening alarm bells of our times drown the chirping of birds and abort the whistling of winds, humanity is compelled to count every breath. Fairytales lie buried in the mountains of ash and “the world droops on its own axis”. This anthology presents a chorus of a deeply disturbing lament at the crisis confronted by humanity now cringing with guilt. But then there is hope of redemption reflected in the confessional tenor of the collective poetic utterance. Each poem locates a fresh poetic idiom for the expression of an unprecedented anguish about the degradation of the environment today. In these chiseled and well-sculpted no-nonsense verses, lies the hope for the survival of life. The diagnosis of the malaise could perhaps make the mountains move and churn out some resolution.
Count Every Breath edited by Vinita Agrawal is a collective petition presented by poets in the
readers’ court for the protection of the living from extinction.
Sukrita Paul Kumar, Poet, Critic, Academic.
An extraordinary and sensitive anthology of poems that enables us to sense and feel the depth of the ecological crisis. It brings it home, making it urgent, immediate, and human. This timely collection from around the world, spurs us to observe, recognise, and act, in a way only poetry can. Ravi Agarwal, artist, environmentalist

Count Every Breath attempts to document the earth as it is changing before our very eyes. There are
stories of extinction and human culpability, of ruins and surviving the apocalypse. A recurring motif
within the anthology is that of the human-arboreal relationship, which readers might read as
harkening back to the fundamental need for the conservation of trees for the thriving of earth (and
us). As we read this anthology in the context of the wider discourse on climate change, let us ask
ourselves how ecopoetry might spark in us a subversive “ecstasy [which] is the courage of gardens
that endure/ the quiver of time” (“Rewilding”, Medha Singh, Count Every Breath).
Esther Vincent Xueming, author of Red Earth and editor of Making Kin: Ecofeminist Essays
from Singapore
As the natural world crumbles and dies around us, these poems bear witness; they care; they pay attention; they grieve. And from the rubble, they salvage startling moments of beauty and grace." Dr Tom Doig, Lecturer in Creative Writing, the University of Queensland (Australia)