As our first-ever round of People, Planet, Pages book clubs come to a close, Thelma Young Lutunatabua, co-editor of the book we’ve been reading “Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility”, will join us for a special event. Join us as she shares some of her writing, followed by a live Q&A.

Date: Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Time: 18:15–20:00 (GMT)

Location: Online

This online event will also be the launch of Take This With You: A Pocket Guide to Climate Hope, a zine created by People, Planet, Pages participants. All book club participants will also be awarded a certificate.

Free and open to the public — you don’t need to have attended one of our book clubs to participate, and you are welcome to bring family and friends.

About Thelma Young Lutunatabua

Thelma Young Lutunatabua is a digital storyteller and activist. She is the co-editor of the book “Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility”. She currently works at The Solutions Project. Before that she’s worked in various roles supporting the global climate movement, as well as other human rights endeavours around the world. She calls Fiji and Texas home.

About People, Planet, Pages

This event is part of People, Planet, Pages, a network of in-person and online hopeful book clubs, bringing together climate-conscious readers for thoughtful discussion and community building. This is more than a book club — it’s a route to remembering that burnout and climate anxiety are real, but so is the power we hold in community. With rising hopelessness and fatigue experienced in recent years, People, Planet, Pages aims to build youth-led communities as the first step to action. It fosters joy and cultivates connection, while exploring influential texts on maintaining momentum and resilience together.

Sign ups are now open for the next round of People, Planet, Pages starting in March.

Zine Launch

This event will also mark the launch of Take This With You: A Pocket Guide to Climate HopeThis is a community-led zine exploring climate hope and action in response to Not Too Late, edited by Rebecca Solnit and Thelma Young Lutunatabua. It will contain words and images by participants in People, Planet, Pages.

The purpose of the zine is to equip readers with a creative toolkit which recognises the successes of the climate movement to date and explores how we can nurture the hope and resilience needed to continue into uncertain futures.