Books
- Grebowicz, M. (2022). Rescue Me: On Dogs and Their People. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Bamford, K. and Grebowicz, M. (2022) (Eds.) Lyotard and Critical Practice. London and New York: Bloomsbury.
- Grebowicz, M. (2021). Mountains and Desire: Climbing vs. the End of the World. London: Repeater.
- Grebowicz, M. (2017). Whale Song. London: Bloomsbury Object Lessons.
- Grebowicz, M. (2015). The National Park to Come. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.
Articles and Book Chapters
- “The National Park Service Is Getting Serious About Mental Health Care” Sierra Magazine May 28, 2024.
- “They Lost Their Land to the Park Service. Now They’re Losing It to Climate Change.” New Republic January 9, 2024.
- “Terry Bisson’s History of the Future”. New Yorker October 7, 2023.
- Grebowicz, M. (2023) “Close Call: Sagan’s Humpbacks and Nonhuman Politics.” In Danilo Mandic (Ed.) Law and the Senses: Hear. Westminster, UK: University of Westminster Press.
- Grebowicz, M and Reyna, Z. (2021). “The Animality of Simone Weil: I Love Dick and a Nonhuman Politics of the Impersonal.” the minnesota review 97. 77-94.
- “You Are Not the Boss of Your Dog.” Slate (Science and Tech) September 24, 2021.
- Grebowicz, M. (2021). “Ecology after Dark: Chernobyl’s Wild Horses and the Traffic in Desire.” the minnesota review 96. 56-68.
- “Horses and Cattle are Destroying a National Park on the Border.” Slate (Future Tense) July 13, 2021.
- “What Litter Tells Us About the Border Crisis.” Slate (Future Tense) June 4, 2021.
- “Everest Is Over.” Atlantic June 5, 2019.
- “The World’s Most Difficult Mountain May Soon Be Fully Conquered.” Atlantic March 1, 2018.
- Grebowicz, M. (2017). “Orca Intimacies and Environmental Slow Death: Earthling Ethics for a Claustrophobic World.” In S. MacGregor (Ed.), The Routledge International Handbook on Gender and Environment. New York: Routledge.
- Grebowicz, M. (2016). “The Internet and the Death of Jazz: Race, Improvisation, and the Crisis of Community.” In R. Purcell and R. Randall (Eds.) 21st Century Perspectives on Music, Technology, and Culture: Listening Spaces. Santa Barbara: Praeger.