Crime writer Peter May envisions a Glasgow ravaged by climate change in his latest thriller.
The book – A Winter Grave – was inspired by his frustration over what he saw as a lack of action at the COP26 summit.
Set 30 years in the future, the novel is based in a Scotland left unrecognisable by sub-zero temperatures and flooding.
“We all sit and watch this happening – politicians doing nothing, our home, our planet going to the dogs, and there’s nothing we can do about it,” he told STV’s Scotland Tonight.
“That’s why I felt really frustrated. What can I do?”
May, a writer with more than four decades’ experience in journalism, literature and TV, was startled by a UN report on climate change predicting a 1.5C increase in global temperatures over the next 20 years.
“Its predictions were grim for the future unless drastic action was taken this decade,” he said. “So I had high hopes something would happen at COP26, but it was a cop-out.”
In May’s new novel, most of Pacific Quay – the home of STV, the Hydro and BBC Scotland – lies under water with artificial walls along the River Clyde all that protects the rest of Glasgow.
The author drew upon real-life estimates of how the city may be affected by climate change in 30 years’ time.
“Glasgow Airport’s gone,” he said. “Large parts of the Clyde estuary are underwater. A lot of the south side is flooded – that was a startling picture I wanted to paint.”
As well as severe flooding, May’s Scotland experiences a bitterly cold climate as it’s hit by snow and ice storms.
He said: “Scotland is on the same latitude as the Alaskan panhandle, so, by rights, our temperature should be at least 10C cooler.”
The novel has been categorised as ‘cli-fi’, a term for literature that deals with climate change, but the Glaswegian author isn’t so keen on the description.
“I don’t know that I like it very much as a genre,” he said. “I’m a crime writer – it’s a thriller, it just happens to have a climate theme to it.”
In A Winter Grave, Scotland is an independent country and has re-joined the European Union.
“It seemed to me it would be fun to look at the political situation,” May said. “What has happened, has Scotland become independent?
“And I would have thought there’s quite a strong chance that within the next 30 years it would.”
Catch up with Scotland Tonight on the STV Player.
Follow STV News on WhatsApp
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country