"Destined to be as influential as Kathryn Yusoff's masterful first book, Geologic Life thinks with geopower and geontopower in order to open rifts in the racist matrixes of time that divide and rank existence and to energize efforts seeking a more porous, less fungible encounter with subjectivity. As Yusoff sinks into the archives that compose the history of white geology, she lifts into view a multitude of missing earths–Indigenous, Black, and Brown earths–visible in seams of geologic ledgers. We must read Yusoff to see what is in front of our blinded eyes."–Elizabeth A. Povinelli, author of "Between Gaia and Ground: Four Axioms of Existence and the Ancestral Catastrophe of Late Liberalism"