Paul Kingsnorth (born 1972 in Worcester) is an English writer who lives in the west of Ireland. He is a former deputy-editor of The Ecologist and a co-founder of the Dark Mountain Project.
He wrote about his spiritual journey and conversion to Christianity in a June 2021 essay in First Things. [wikipedia]. [His] debut novel, The Wake, won the 2014 Gordon Burn Prize and the Bookseller Book of the Year Award, as well as being longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, the Folio Prize and the Desmond Elliott Prize, and shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize. Beast, the second book in his Buckmaster Trilogy, was shortlisted for the RSL Encore Award 2017. He is also the author of the non-fiction books One No, Many Yeses, Real England, Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist and Savage Gods, as well as two poetry collections, Kidland and Songs from the Blue River. —- Orthodox Arts Festival
The remaking and homogenization of the human person by means of technological abuse towards the advancement of a corporate-political and globally engineered One World order:
— Why the Future Doesn’t Need Us. — Bill Joy, Wired Magazine
— Paul Kingsnorth: The Fourth Revolution
— Remaking the World: The Pornographic Roots of the Trans Sex Cult (Brendan O’Neill)