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To Open The Sky

The Front Pages of Christopher P. Winter
Work in progress

Books about Factors Affecting the Societal Acceptance of Climate Change

Note: Links to these categories are accessible at the next level up.

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Acceptance
Don't Sell Your Coat
Surprising Truths About Climate Change
Harold Ambler
Lansing International Books, December 2011
No Review

Among the "Editorial reviews" on Amazon: "You don't need to be a right-wing SOB to think that 'man made global warming' is an Enron-style scam. Harold Ambler is a card-carrying liberal and he thinks so, too. He's also very funny. Buy this book!" – James Delingpole, author of Watermelons: The Green Movement's True Colors." Others come from Joe Bastardi, Freeman Dyson, Roger Tattersall (aka Tallbloke), and Andrew Montford.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (61 ratings)
ISBN 978-0615569048 SJ0 1/14/2017
Facing the Anthropocene:
Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System
Ian Angus
Monthly Review Press (July, 2016)
No Review

"Science tells us that a new and dangerous stage in planetary evolution has begun—the Anthropocene, a time of rising temperatures, extreme weather, rising oceans, and mass species extinctions. Humanity faces not just more pollution or warmer weather, but a crisis of the Earth System. If business as usual continues, this century will be marked by rapid deterioration of our physical, social, and economic environment. Large parts of Earth will become uninhabitable, and civilization itself will be threatened. Facing the Anthropocene shows what has caused this planetary emergency, and what we must do to meet the challenge." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1583676103 SJ0 1/14/2017
Fast Forward:
Ethics and Politics in the Age of Global Warming
William Antholis & Strobe Talbott
Brookings Institution Press (May 2010)
No Review

"Fast Forward is equal parts science primer, history lesson, policy prescription, and ethical treatise. This pithy and compelling book makes clear what we know and don't know about global warming; why the threat demands prudent and urgent action; why the transition to a low-carbon economy will be the most difficult political and economic transaction in history; and how it requires nothing less than a revolution in our sense of civic responsibility." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.6 (4 ratings)
ISBN 978-0815704690 SJ0 6/22/2018
A Strategic Nature:
Public Relations and the Politics of American Environmentalism
Melissa Aronczyk & Maria I. Espinoza
Oxford University Press (January 7, 2022)
No Review

"In A Strategic Nature, Melissa Aronczyk and Maria I. Espinoza examine public relations as a social and political force that shapes both our understanding of the environmental crises we now face and our responses to them. Drawing on in-depth interviews, ethnography, and archival research, Aronczyk and Espinoza document the evolution of PR techniques to control public perception of the environment since the beginning of the twentieth century. More than spin or misinformation, PR affects how institutions and individuals conceptualize environmental problems — from conservation to coal mining to carbon credits. Revealing the linkages of professional strategists, information politics, and environmental standards, A Strategic Nature shows how public relations restricts alternative paths to a sustainable climate future."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0190055356 ?
Climate Science for Serving Society:
Research, Modeling and Prediction Priorities
Ghassem R. Asrar & James W. Hurrell (Editors)
Springer (June, 2013)
No Review

"This volume offers a comprehensive survey and a close analysis of efforts to develop actionable climate information in support of vital decisions for climate adaptation, risk management and policy. Arising from submissions and discussion at the 2011 Open Science Conference (OSC) of the World Climate Research Program (WCRP), the book addresses research and intellectual challenges which span the full range of Program activities."the human dimensions of climate change. It should be of broad interest to all those concerned with global justice, environmental science and policy, and the future of humanity."

Rating by Amazon customers: 1.0 (1 review)
ISBN 978-9400766914 ?
Eco-Scam:
The False Prophets of Ecological Apocalypse
Ronald Bailey
St. Martin's Press (February, 1993)
No Review

"A former Forbes science editor argues that Jeremy Rifkin, Jay Forrester, Carl Sagan, Paul Ehrlich, and other environmental experts are wrong in their assertion that, due to the burning of fossil fuels and rain forests, the Earth is in grave danger."

Rating by Amazon customers: 2.9 (3 ratings)
ISBN 978-0312086985 ?
The Climate Majority
Leo Barasi
New Internationalist (October, 2017)
No Review

"The Climate Majority is the first book to investigate climate apathy, to describe how it prevents action to stop climate change and to show how it can be beaten with an approach developed for political campaigns."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1780264073 ?
The Climate Chronicles:
Inconvenient Revelations You Won't Hear From Al Gore—And Others
Joe Bastardi
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (January 2, 2018)
No Review

"A revealing look by someone who has loved the weather since his first memory—and has worked in the field for over 40 years—at what is really inside the man-made "climate change" agenda. The author shows through countless examples, the exploitation, politicization, and weaponization of weather and climate in an effort to promote an agenda that runs counter to the foundations this nation was built on." – the author

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (36 ratings)
ISBN 978-1983509384 ?
China Lake: (The Iowa Prize in Literary Nonfiction)
A Journey into the Contradicted Heart of a Global Climate Catastrophe
Barrett Baumgart
University Of Iowa Press (May, 2017)
No Review

"Barret Baumgart's literary debut presents a haunting and deeply personal portrait of civilization poised at the precipice, a picture of humanity caught between its deepest past and darkest future. In the fall of 2013, during the height of California's historic drought, Baumgart toured the remote military base NAWS China Lake, near Death Valley, California. His mother, the survivor of a recent stroke, decided to come along for the ride. She hoped the alleged healing power of the base's ancient Native American hot springs might cure her crippling headaches. Baumgart sought to debunk claims that the military was spraying the atmosphere with toxic chemicals to control the weather. What follows is a discovery that threatens to sever not only the bonds between mother and son but between planet Earth and life itself.

"Stalking the fringes of Internet conspiracy, speculative science, and contemporary archaeology, Baumgart weaves memoir, military history, and investigative journalism in a dizzying journey that carries him from the cornfields of Iowa to drought-riddled California, from the Vietnam jungle to the caves of prehistoric Europe and eventually the walls of the US Capitol, the sparkling white hallways of the Pentagon, and straight into the contradicted heart of a worldwide climate emergency."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (16 ratings)
ISBN 978-1609384708 ?
A Cultural History of Climate
Wolfgang Behringer
Polity (December 21, 2009)
No Review

"Global warming and the future of the climate is one of the greatest challenges of our time, but what do we know about climate variations 500 years ago, or 5000 years ago? How can we know anything at all about the history of weather? What impact have climate changes had on human prosperity and the spirit of invention?

"In this major new book Wolfgang Behringer introduces us to the latest historical research on the development of the earth's climate. He focuses above all on the cultural reactions to climate change through the ages, showing how even minor changes in the climate sometimes resulted in major social, political and religious upheavals. By examining how our predecessors responded to climate changes, Behringer provides us with a fresh basis for thinking about how we might address the serious climatic challenges we face today."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (15 ratings)
ISBN 978-0745645292 ?
A Global Warming Primer:
Answering Your Questions About The Science, The Consequences, and The Solutions
Jeffrey Bennett
Big Kid Science (September, 2016)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (41 ratings)
ISBN 978-1937548780 ?
Climate Optimism:
Celebrating Systemic Change Around the World
Zahra Biabani
Christiana Figueres (Foreword)
Mango (April 11, 2023)
No Review
"Zahra Biabani is a climate activist, influencer, CEO, and writer. Her content focuses on climate hope, optimism, humor, and action items. After unexpectedly establishing a career as an online sustainability educator and influencer her junior year at Vanderbilt University, Zahra decided to jump head first into the waters of entrepreneurship and authorship. Her startup, In the Loop, is the first rental clothing company for vetted sustainable and ethical fashion brands."

"Zahra Biabini, a climate activist with a creative twist, created this guide to help readers learn how to stay optimistic in the face of the climate crisis. Doing good things can make a change to developing environmental sustainability!

"Change the way you think about the future. The fate of humanity can be daunting, but we don’t need to live in that space. First, we need to change our attitude in order to implement nature-based-solutions to deal with climate change. Good news: there are environmental trends and examples to change the way you think about how we can protect the planet.

"Get to know Zahra Biabani/, a climate activist, influencer, CEO, and writer. Zahra focuses on climate hope, optimism, humor, and doing good things. After unexpectedly establishing a career as an online sustainability educator and influencer her junior year at Vanderbilt University, Zahra decided to jump head first into the waters of entrepreneurship and authorship. Climate Optimism is her way to spread hope in the world.

"Inside, you’ll find:

  • Real stories on environmental sustainability in other countries that are working
  • A mix of unique solutions and practical advice on how to face the climate change
  • Good news on how to change the way you think and feel about the climate crisis

"If you're looking for a sustainable living book or books for activists centered on environmentalism like A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety, The Intersectional Environmentalist, or Sustainable Badass, you’ll love Climate Optimism."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (22 ratings)
ISBN 978-1684811588 ?
For the Beauty of the Earth:
A Christian Vision for Creation Care
Steven Bouma-Prediger
Baker Academic; 2nd edition (April 1, 2010)
No Review
"Steven Bouma-Prediger (PhD, University of Chicago) is the Leonard and Marjorie Maas Professor of Reformed Theology at Hope College in Holland, Michigan. He also oversees the Environmental Studies minor and cochairs the Campus Sustainability Advisory Committee. In addition, Bouma-Prediger has taught theology and ethics at Western Theological Seminary and is a board member of the Au Sable Institute of Environmental Studies. He is author or coauthor of six books, including Earthkeeping and Character: Exploring a Christian Ecological Virtue Ethic and For the Beauty of the Earth: A Christian Vision for Creation Care."

"Caring for the environment is a growing interest among evangelicals. This award-winning book provides the most thorough evangelical treatment available on a theology of creation care. 'Authentic Christian faith requires ecological obedience,' writes Steven Bouma-Prediger. He urges Christians to acknowledge their responsibility and privilege as stewards of the earth. The second edition has been substantially revised and updated with the latest scientific and environmental research."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (31 ratings)
ISBN 978-0801036958 ?
The Power of Crisis:
How Three Threats – and Our Response – Will Change the World
Ian Bremmer
Simon & Schuster (May 17, 2022)
No Review

"In this revelatory, unnerving, and ultimately hopeful book, Bremmer details how domestic and international conflicts leave us unprepared for a trio of looming crises—global health emergencies, transformative climate change, and the AI revolution. Today, Americans cannot reach consensus on any significant political issue, and US and Chinese leaders behave as if they’re locked in a new Cold War. We are squandering opportunities to meet the challenges that will soon confront us all.

"In coming years, humanity will face viruses deadlier and more infectious than Covid. Intensifying climate change will put tens of millions of refugees in flight and require us to reimagine how we live our daily lives. Most dangerous of all, new technologies will reshape the geopolitical order, disrupting our livelihoods and destabilizing our societies faster than we can grasp and address their implications.

"The good news? Some farsighted political leaders, business decision-makers, and individual citizens are already collaborating to tackle all these crises. The question that should keep us awake is whether they will work well and quickly enough to limit the fallout—and, most importantly, whether we can use these crises to innovate our way toward a better world.

"Drawing on strategies both time-honored and cutting-edge, from the Marshall Plan to the Green New Deal, The Power of Crisisprovides a roadmap for surviving—even thriving in—the 21st century. Bremmer shows governments, corporations, and every concerned citizen how we can use these coming crises to create the worldwide prosperity and opportunity that 20th-century globalism promised but failed to deliver."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (65 rating)
ISBN 978-1982167509 ?
Ways of Being:
Animals, Plants, Machines: The Search for a Planetary Intelligence
James Bridle
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (June 21, 2022)
No Review
"James Bridle is a writer and an artist. Their writing on art, politics, culture, and technology has appeared in magazines and newspapers including The Guardian, The Observer, Wired, The Atlantic, the New Statesman, frieze, Domus, and ICON. New Dark Age, their book about technology, knowledge, and the end of the future, was published in 2018 and has been translated into more than a dozen languages. In 2019, they wrote and presented New Ways of Seeing, a four-part series for BBC Radio 4. Their artworks have been commissioned by galleries and institutions including the V&A, Whitechapel Gallery, the Barbican, Hayward Gallery, and the Serpentine and have been exhibited worldwide and on the internet."

"Artist, technologist, and philosopher James Bridle’s Ways of Being is a brilliant, searching exploration of different kinds of intelligence―plant, animal, human, artificial―and how they transform our understanding of humans’ place in the cosmos.

"What does it mean to be intelligent? Is it something unique to humans or shared with other beings― beings of flesh, wood, stone, and silicon? The last few years have seen rapid advances in “artificial” intelligence. But rather than a friend or companion, AI increasingly appears to be something stranger than we ever imagined, an alien invention that threatens to decenter and supplant us.

"At the same time, we’re only just becoming aware of the other intelligences that have been with us all along, even if we’ve failed to recognize or acknowledge them. These others―the animals, plants, and natural systems that surround us―are slowly revealing their complexity, agency, and knowledge, just as the technologies we’ve built to sustain ourselves are threatening to cause their extinction and ours. What can we learn from them, and how can we change ourselves, our technologies, our societies, and our politics to live better and more equitably with one another and the nonhuman world?

"The artist and maverick thinker James Bridle draws on biology and physics, computation, literature, art, and philosophy to answer these unsettling questions. Startling and bold, Ways of Being explores the fascinating, strange, and multitudinous forms of knowing, doing, and being that make up the world, and that are essential for our survival."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (100 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374601119 ?
Nature Unbound:
Conservation, Capitalism and the Future of Protected Areas
Dan Brockington, Rosaleen Duffy & Jim Igoe
Routledge (October, 2008)
No Review

"This groundbreaking volume is the first comprehensive, critical examination of the rise of protected areas and their current social and economic position in our world. It examines the social impacts of protected areas, the conflicts that surround them, the alternatives to them and the conceptual categories they impose." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 review)
ISBN 978-1844074402 ?
Climate Matters:
Ethics in a Warming World
John Broome
New York: W. W. Norton & Company (July, 2012)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (11 ratings)
ISBN 978-0393063363 ?
Environmental Virtue Ethics
Philip Cafaro & Ronald Sandler (Editors)
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (January, 2005)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (2 ratings)
ISBN 978-0742533905 ?
Denying Science:
Reflections on Those Who Refuse to Accept the Results of Scientific Studies
Pascal de Caprariis
AuthorHouse (June 30, 2017)
No Review

"The denial of scientific knowledge has become respectable in today's society, to the point that it threatens the health of the public and the stability of our society as climatic changes due to global warming occur."

"The topics covered in this book highlight some of the differences between reputable studies and the public relations efforts of groups that reject scientific studies in order to advance their own agendas."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 review)
ISBN 9978-1524698072 ?
Environmentalism Gone Mad
Alan Carlin
Stairway Press (April, 2015)
No Review

"Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.9 (22 ratings)
ISBN 978-1941071137 ?
Feeling the Heat
Jo Chandler
Melbourne University Press (August 2011)
No Review

"With wit and great humanity, Jo Chandler brings the sceptical intelligence of the investigative journalist to tell us what's happening with climate change and why we are so conflicted about this issue. Everyone who cares about the future should read this book." – Peter Doherty, Nobel Prize winner

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0522857719 SJ0 2/08/2017
A Sinister Charade:
The Global Warming Hoax (a novel)
Dan Coffman
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (June, 2015)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (8 ratings)
ISBN 978-1514100691 ?
Cranky Uncle vs. Climate Change:
How to Understand and Respond to Climate Science Deniers
John Cook
Citadel (February 25, 2020)
No Review

"When it comes to climate change, this truly is a golden age—of fake news, post-truths, pluralistic ignorance, conspiracy theories, a willfully ignorant administration, and the Cranky Uncle. You know him. We all have one. That exasperating Thanksgiving blusterer digs in his heels even as the foundation of his denial thaws faster than the Arctic ice caps.

"Written and illustrated by Dr. John Cook, cognitive psychologist and founder of the award-winning website Skeptical Science, Cranky Uncle combines humor and science to make clear, calm, and winnable arguments in the public controversy of climate change. Can we change our Cranky Uncle's mind? Probably, regrettably, not. But Dr. Cook makes it easier for us to understand him. And armed with this knowledge, prevent climate misinformation from spreading further."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.9 (17 ratings)
ISBN 978-0806540276 ?
The Human, the Orchid, and the Octopus
Exploring and Conserving our Natural World
Jacques Cousteau
Susan Schiefelbein
Bill McKibben (Fwd.)
New York: Bloomsbury, October 2007
My Review

A biography of the late ocean explorer.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.9 (14 ratings)
ISBN 978-1-59691-417-9 SJ eBook
Surviving the 21st Century:
Humanity's Ten Great Challenges and How We Can Overcome Them
Julian Cribb
Springer (September, 2016)
No Review

"The author examines ten intersecting areas of activity (mass extinction, resource depletion, WMD, climate change, universal toxicity, food crises, population and urban expansion, pandemic disease, dangerous new technologies and self-delusion) which pose manifest risks to civilization and, potentially, to our species' long-term future. This isn't a book just about problems. It is also about solutions. Every chapter concludes with clear conclusions and consensus advice on what needs to be done at global level—but it also empowers individuals with what they can do for themselves to make a difference. Unlike other books, it offers integrated solutions across the areas of greatest risk. It explains why Homo sapiens is no longer an appropriate name for our species, and what should be done about it."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.8 (23 ratings)
ISBN 978-3319412696 ?
State of Fear
Michael Crichton
New York: Avon, July 2004
My Review

This is a novel, and an entertaining one. However, I include it because of what Crichton considered factual content — content that made it the only work of fiction to be entered as testimony into the Congressional Record. It's all fiction, folks.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (2,266 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-06-101573-1 ?
Gaia in Turmoil:
Climate Change, Biodepletion, and Earth Ethics in an Age of Crisis
Eileen Crist & H. Bruce Rinker (Editors)
Bill McKibben (Foreword)
The MIT Press (October, 2009)
No Review

"Contributors focus first on the science of Gaia, considering such topics as the workings of the biosphere, the planet's water supply, and evolution; then discuss Gaian perspectives on global environmental change, including biodiversity destruction and global warming; and finally explore the influence of Gaia on environmental policy, ethics, politics, technology, economics, and education."

Rating by Amazon customers: 2.9 (2 ratings)
ISBN 978-0262513524 ?
The Weather of the Future
Heat Waves, Extreme Storms, and Other Scenes from a Climate-Changed Planet
Heidi Cullen
HarperCollins, August 2010
My Review

"Using climate-model projections to forecast tomorrow's (potential) weather, the author takes us through the next 40-odd years, painting a rather gloomy picture of what's in store for our planet and offering some suggestions about what we can do today to avoid catastrophe. Some readers might dismiss the book as a manifestation of Chicken Little syndrome, but others, noting the author's calm, reasonable tone and sensible extrapolations from present-day phenomena, will no doubt conclude that this is a woman to whom attention must be paid." – David Pitt, Booklist

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (39 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-06-172688-0 ?
How to Change Minds about our Changing Climate:
Let Science Do the Talking the Next Time Someone Tries to Tell You...
Seth B. Darling & Douglas L. Sisterson
The Experiment (July, 2014)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.9 (18 ratings)
ISBN 978-1615192236 ?
Emotional Resiliency in the Era of Climate Change:
A Clinician's Guide
Leslie Davenpor
Lise Van Susteren M.D. (Foreword)
Jessica Kingsley Publishers (January, 2017)
No Review

"Although the environmental and physical effects of climate change have long been recognised, little attention has been given to the profound negative impact on mental health. Leslie Davenport presents comprehensive theory, strategies and resources for addressing key clinical themes specific to the psychological impact of climate change.

She explores the psychological underpinnings that have contributed to the current global crisis, and offers robust therapeutic interventions for dealing with anxiety, stress, depression, trauma and other clinical mental health conditions resulting from environmental damage and disaster. She emphasizes the importance of developing resilience and shows how to utilise the many benefits of guided imagery and mindful presence techniques, and carry out interventions that draw on expert research into ecopsychology, wisdom traditions, earth-based indigenous practices and positive psychology. The strategies in this book will cultivate transformative, person-centred ways of being, resulting in regenerative lifestyles that benefit both the individual and the planet."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1785927195 ?
Extreme Cities:
The Peril and Promise of Urban Life in the Age of Climate Change
Ashley Dawson
Verso (October 17, 2017)
My Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (8 ratings)
ISBN 978-1784780364 ?
Am I Making Myself Clear?
A Scientist's Guide To Talking With the Public
Cornelia Dean
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2009
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (? ratings)
ISBN 978-0-674-03635-2 ?
The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change:
A Guide to the Debate (2nd Edition)
Professor Andrew Dessler & Edward A. Parson
Cambridge University Press (March, 2010)
No Review

"The second edition of Dessler and Parson's acclaimed book provides an integrated treatment of the science, technology, economics, policy, and politics of climate change."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (15 ratings)
ISBN 978-0521737401 ?
Global Warming:
A Layman's Guide to the Issues
Patrick R. Dugan
AuthorHouse (September, 2008)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers:? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1434398109 ?
Overheating:
An Anthropology of Accelerated Change
Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Pluto Press (October, 2016)
No Review

"We live in a time of global crisis—or, more appropriately, crises: overlapping, interlocking global problems that are inextricably tied to modernity. Overheating offers a groundbreaking new way of looking at the problems of the Anthropocene, exploring crises of the environment, economy, and identity through an anthropological lens. Thomas Hylland Eriksen argues that while each of these crises is global in scope, they are nonetheless perceived and responded to locally—and that once we realize that, we begin to see the contradictions that abound between the standardizing forces of global capitalism and the socially embedded nature of people and local practices. Only by acknowledging the primacy of the local, Eriksen shows, can we begin to even properly understand, let alone address, these problems on a global scale."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0745336398 ?
A Better Planet:
Forty Big Ideas for a Sustainable Future
Daniel C. Esty (Editor)
Ingrid C. Burke (Foreword)
Yale University Press (October 22, 2019)
No Review

"Sustainability has emerged as a global priority over the past several years. The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change and the adoption of the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals through the United Nations have highlighted the need to address critical challenges such as the buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, water shortages, and air pollution. But in the United States, partisan divides, regional disputes, and deep disagreements over core principles have made it nearly impossible to chart a course toward a sustainable future.

"This timely new book, edited by celebrated scholar Daniel C. Esty, offers fresh thinking and forward-looking solutions from environmental thought leaders across the political spectrum. The book's forty essays cover such subjects as ecology, environmental justice, Big Data, public health, and climate change, all with an emphasis on sustainability. The book focuses on moving toward sustainability through actionable, bipartisan approaches based on rigorous analytical research."

Rating by Amazon customers: 2.6 (5 ratings)
ISBN 978-0300246247 ?
Atmosphere of Hope
Searching for Solutions to the Climate Crisis
Tim Flannery
New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, October 2015
My Review

Updating the story, Tim Flannery shows us a passel of new possibilities that may help save the climate.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.1 (10 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-8021-2406-7 ?
We Are the Weather:
Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast
Jonathan Safran Foer
New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (September 17, 2019)
No Review

"Some people reject the fact, overwhelmingly supported by scientists, that our planet is warming because of human activity. But do those of us who accept the reality of human-caused climate change truly believe it? If we did, surely we would be roused to act on what we know. Will future generations distinguish between those who didn't believe in the science of global warming and those who said they accepted the science but failed to change their lives in response?

"In We Are the Weather, Jonathan Safran Foer explores the central global dilemma of our time in a surprising, deeply personal, and urgent new way. The task of saving the planet will involve a great reckoning with ourselves—with our all-too-human reluctance to sacrifice immediate comfort for the sake of the future. We have, he reveals, turned our planet into a farm for growing animal products, and the consequences are catastrophic. Only collective action will save our home and way of life. And it all starts with what we eat—and don't eat—for breakfast.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (51 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374280000 ?
Hot, Flat, and Crowded:
Why We Need a Green Revolution — and How it Can Renew America
Thomas L. Friedman
New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (? ratings)
ISBN 978-0-374-16685-4 ?
Enter the Tree:
A Novel of Climate Change
Britt Gjerde
Independently published (March 10, 2019)
No Review

"A major earthquake in Silicon Valley sets off a series of tree immersion episodes for one woman who must decide how to resolve her medical training with the sudden ability to heal patients through touch. She discovers a strange group of people who have also experienced unusual interactions with trees and through their assistance, she sets out to find the source of, and reason for, her alternative form of healing. Set against the backdrop of the California Redwood Coast, Ginevra discovers that her interactions with trees are entwined with the fate of the Earth, which is facing immediate peril."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 rating)
978-1520906447 ?
The Dawn of a Mindful Universe:
A Manifesto for Humanity's Future
Marcelo Gleiser
HarperOne (August 22, 2023)
No Review
"The first Latin American winner of the Templeton Prize, Marcelo Gleiser is a theoretical physicist and a professor of natural philosophy, physics, and astronomy at Dartmouth College. His work ranges from cosmology and applications of information theory to complex phenomena to history and philosophy of science and how science and culture interact. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, a recipient of the Presidential Faculty Fellows Award from the White House and National Science Foundation. Gleiser has authored five books and is the co-founder of 13.8, where he writes about science and culture with physicist Adam Frank. He is devoted to the public understanding of science and his books have been published in fifteen languages. A native of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he lives in Hanover, New Hampshire."

"An award-winning astronomer and physicist’s spellbinding and urgent call for a new Enlightenment and the recognition of the preciousness of life using reason and curiosity—the foundations of science—to study, nurture, and ultimately preserve humanity as we face the existential crisis of climate change.

"Since Copernicus, humanity has increasingly seen itself as adrift, an insignificant speck within a large, cold universe. Brazilian physicist, astronomer, and winner of the 2019 Templeton Prize Marcelo Gleiser argues that it is because we have lost the spark of the Enlightenment that has guided human development over the past several centuries. While some scientific efforts have been made to overcome this increasingly bleak perspective—the ongoing search for life on other planets, the recent idea of the multiverse—they have not been enough to overcome the core problem: we’ve lost our moral mission and compassionate focus in our scientific endeavors.

"Gleiser argues that we’re using the wrong paradigm to relate to the universe and our position in it. In this deeply researched and beautifully rendered book, he calls for us to embrace a new life-centric perspective, one which recognizes just how rare and precious life is and why it should be our mission to preserve and nurture it. The Dawn of a Mindful Universe addresses the current environmental and scientific impasses and how the scientific community can find solutions to them.

"Gleiser’s paradigm rethinks the ideals of the Enlightenment, and proposes a new direction for humanity, one driven by human reason and curiosity whose purpose is to save civilization itself. Within this model, we can once again see ourselves as the center of the universe—the place where life becomes conscious—and regain a clear moral compass which can be used to guide both science and the politics around it."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (28 ratings)
ISBN 978-0063056879 ?
Crossings:
How Road Ecology Is Shaping the Future of Our Planet
Ben Goldfarb
New York: W. W. Norton & Company (September 12, 2023)
No Review
"Ben Goldfarb is the author of Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter, winner of the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, National Geographic, the New York Times, and many other publications, and has been anthologized in The Best American Science and Nature Writing. A recipient of fellowships from the Alicia Patterson Foundation and the Whiting Foundation, he lives in Colorado."

"An eye-opening account of the global ecological transformations wrought by roads, from the award-winning author of Eager.

"Some 40 million miles of roadways encircle the earth, yet we tend to regard them only as infrastructure for human convenience. While roads are so ubiquitous they’re practically invisible to us, wild animals experience them as entirely alien forces of death and disruption. In Crossings, environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb travels throughout the United States and around the world to investigate how roads have transformed our planet. A million animals are killed by cars each day in the U.S. alone, but as the new science of road ecology shows, the harms of highways extend far beyond roadkill. Creatures from antelope to salmon are losing their ability to migrate in search of food and mates; invasive plants hitch rides in tire treads; road salt contaminates lakes and rivers; and the very noise of traffic chases songbirds from vast swaths of habitat.

"Yet road ecologists are also seeking to blunt the destruction through innovative solutions. Goldfarb meets with conservationists building bridges for California’s mountain lions and tunnels for English toads, engineers deconstructing the labyrinth of logging roads that web national forests, animal rehabbers caring for Tasmania’s car-orphaned wallabies, and community organizers working to undo the havoc highways have wreaked upon American cities.

"Today, as our planet’s road network continues to grow exponentially, the science of road ecology has become increasingly vital. Written with passion and curiosity, Crossings is a sweeping, spirited, and timely investigation into how humans have altered the natural world―and how we can create a better future for all living beings."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 rating)
ISBN 978-1324005896 ?
A Bright Future:
How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow
Joshua S. Goldstein & Staffan A. Qvist
Steven Pinker (Fwd.)
PublicAffairs (January 8, 2019)
My Review
"Joshua S. Goldstein is an International Relations professor who writes about the big issues facing humanity. He is the author of six books about war, peace, diplomacy, and economic history, and a bestselling college textbook, International Relations. Among other awards, his book War and Gender (2001) won the International Studies Association's 'Book of the Decade Award' in 2010. Goldstein has a B.A. from Stanford and a Ph.D. from M.I.T. He is professor emeritus at American University in Washington, DC, and research scholar at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where he lives.
Staffan A. Qvist is a Swedish engineer, scientist and consultant to clean energy projects around the world. He has lectured and authored numerous studies in the scientific literature on various topics relating to energy technology and policy, nuclear reactor design and safety, and climate change mitigation strategies — research that has been covered by Scientific American and many other media outlets. Trained as a nuclear engineer (Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley), he is now involved in renewable energy development projects and also works with several 'fourth generation' nuclear start-ups."

"As climate change quickly approaches a series of turning points that guarantee disastrous outcomes, a solution is hiding in plain sight. Several countries have already replaced fossil fuels with low-carbon energy sources, and done so rapidly, in one to two decades. By following their methods, we could decarbonize the global economy by midcentury, replacing fossil fuels even while world energy use continues to rise. But so far we have lacked the courage to really try.

"In this clear-sighted and compelling book, Joshua Goldstein and Staffan Qvist explain how clean energy quickly replaced fossil fuels in such places as Sweden, France, South Korea, and Ontario. Their people enjoyed prosperity and growing energy use in harmony with the natural environment. They didn't do this through personal sacrifice, nor through 100 percent renewables, but by using them in combination with an energy source the Swedes call käkraft, hundreds of times safer and cleaner than coal."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (140 ratings)
ISBN 978-1541724105 ?
The Anthropocene Reviewed:
Essays on a Human-Centered Planet
John Green
Dutton (May 18, 2021)
No Review
"John Green is the award-winning, #1 bestselling author of books including Looking for Alaska, The Fault in Our Stars, and Turtles All the Way Down. His books have received many accolades, including a Printz Medal, a Printz Honor, and an Edgar Award. John has twice been a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize and was selected by TIME magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World. He is also the writer and host of the critically acclaimed podcast The Anthropocene Reviewed. With his brother, Hank, John has co-created many online video projects, including Vlogbrothers and the educational channel Crash Course. He lives with his family in Indianapolis, Indiana. You can visit John online at johngreenbooks.com."

"The Anthropocene is the current geologic age, in which humans have profoundly reshaped the planet and its biodiversity. In this remarkable symphony of essays adapted and expanded from his groundbreaking podcast, bestselling author John Green reviews different facets of the human-centered planet on a five-star scale—from the QWERTY keyboard and sunsets to Canada geese and Penguins of Madagascar.

"Funny, complex, and rich with detail, the reviews chart the contradictions of contemporary humanity. As a species, we are both far too powerful and not nearly powerful enough, a paradox that came into sharp focus as we faced a global pandemic that both separated us and bound us together.

"John Green’s gift for storytelling shines throughout this masterful collection. The Anthropocene Reviewed is a open-hearted exploration of the paths we forge and an unironic celebration of falling in love with the world."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (8,562 ratings)
ISBN 978-0525555216 ?
Dark Age America:
Climate Change, Cultural Collapse, and the Hard Future Ahead
John Michael Greer
New Society Publishers (August, 2016)
No Review

"If the future trajectory of our civilization follows the same general patterns laid down by previous ones, then John Michael Greer's new book gives us perhaps the best view of the future currently available. His thoughts on the great unraveling ahead are rooted in a broad and deep knowledge of history; even if you disagree with him about the future, you will learn a great deal from his survey of the relevant human past." – Richard Heinberg, author of The End of Growth

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (145 ratings)
ISBN 978-0865718333 ?
The Ecotechnic Future:
Envisioning a Post-Peak World
John Michael Greer
New Society Publishers (October, 2009)
No Review

"In response to the coming impact of peak oil, John Michael Greer helps us envision the transition from an industrial society to a sustainable ecotechnic world-not returning to the past, but creating a society that supports relatively advanced technology on a sustainable resource base.

"Fusing human ecology and history, this book challenges assumptions held by mainstream and alternative thinkers about the evolution of human societies. Human societies, like ecosystems, evolve in complex and unpredictable ways, making it futile to try to impose rigid ideological forms on the patterns of evolutionary change. Instead, social change must explore many pathways over which we have no control. The troubling and exhilarating prospect of an open-ended future, he proposes, requires dissensus-a deliberate acceptance of radical diversity that widens the range of potential approaches to infinity.

"Written in three parts, the book places the present crisis of the industrial world in its historical and ecological context in part one; part two explores the toolkit for [an] Ecotechnic Age, and part three opens a door to the complexity of future visions.

"For anyone concerned about peak oil and the future of the industrial society, this book provides a solid analysis of how we got to where we are, and a practical toolkit to prepare for the future."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (44 ratings)
ISBN 978-978-0865716391 ?
The Ecotechnic Future: (2nd Edition)
Envisioning a Post-Peak World
John Michael Greer
Founders House Publishing LLC (July 2, 2021)
No Review

"As conventional notions of perpetual progress and overnight apocalypse prove hopelessly inadequate as models for our present predicament, John Michael Greer offers a vision of cultural evolution based on the recognition that human societies are subject to the same rules as all other living communities and follow trajectories through time over which we have no control. A process of succession, like the one that converts barren ground into forest on a timescale of centuries, governs the rise and fall of civilizations...including ours.

"The ongoing crisis of the industrial world needs to be seen for what it is: the opening phase of a long and challenging transition. That transition does not lead back to the social patterns of the past. It points forward to a new kind of human ecology—the ecotechnic societies of the far future, which will support relatively advanced technologies on a sustainable resource base.

"Greer shows that many core elements of the ecotechnics of the future already exist in embryonic form, and individual and community action here and now can help develop the toolkit our descendants will use. Ready or not, we are already on our way to... The Ecotechnic Future."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (4 ratings)
ISBN 978-978-1945810558 ?
Green Wizardry:
Conservation, Solar Power, Organic Gardening, and Other Hands-On Skills From the Appropriate Tech Toolkit
John Michael Greer
New Society Publishers (September, 2013)
No Review

"John Michael Greer proposes a modern mage for uncertain times; one who possesses a startling array of practical skills gleaned from the appropriate tech and organic gardening movements forged in the energy crisis of the 1970s. From the basic concepts of ecology to a plethora of practical techniques such as composting, green manure, low-tech food preservation and storage, small-scale chicken and rabbit raising, solar water heating, alternative energy sources, and more, Green Wizardry is a comprehensive manual for today's wizard-in-training."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (71 ratings)
ISBN 978-0865717473 ?
Star's Reach:
A Novel Of The Deindustrial Future
John Michael Greer
Founders House Publishing LLC (April, 2014)
No Review

"More than four centuries have passed since industrial civilization stumbled to its ruin under the self-inflicted blows of climate change and resource depletion. Now, in the ruins of a deserted city, a young man mining metal risks his life to win a priceless clue. That discovery will send him and an unlikely band of seekers on a quest for a place out of legend where human beings might once have communicated with distant worlds — a place called Star's Reach." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.8 (77 ratings)
ISBN 978-0984376476 ?
Twilight's Last Gleaming
John Michael Greer
Karnac Books (November, 2014)
No Review

"A chilling high-concept geo-political thriller where a declining United States and a resurgent China come to the brink of all out nuclear war.

"The year is 2025. Oil is the black gold that controls the fortunes of all nations and the once-mighty United States is down to the dregs. A giant oil field is discovered off the Tanzanian coast and the newly elected US President finds his solution to America’s ailing economy. While the US blindly plots and plans regime change in this hitherto insignificant African nation, Tanzania’s allies – the Chinese – start their own secret machinations. The explosion that follows shatters a decades-old balance of global power and triggers a crisis on American soil that the United States may not survive. Political conspiracies, military manouvers, and covert activities are woven together in this fast-paced, gripping novel that paints a stark warning of an uncomfortably likely future."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (205 ratings)
ISBN 978-1782200352 ?
Climate Change:
Our Children Are in Danger
Mary Guay
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (January 1, 2014)
My Review

A Florida grandmother explains how she came to understand that climate change is the biggest problem facing her and her family — the human family.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.8 (8 ratings)
ISBN 978-1494733605 ?
The Eleventh Grieve
Garth Hallberg
Reason for Everything Press (April 22, 2023)
No Review
"Garth Hallberg has had varied careers as a naval officer, advertising executive, marketing consultant, and college professor. He lives with his family in a small hamlet forty miles from Manhattan, where they can enjoy both the stimulation of the big city and the quiet pleasures of the surrounding countryside. Hallberg's approach to fiction is simple—"Write what you don't know you know"— because writing a novel is not only a willful act of imagination but also a journey of discovery."

"Jake Krimmer is a brash, thirtysomething financial speculator who's making a killing off the Cuisinart tornadoes, Hades-hot heat waves, and ark-worthy floods that seem to strike every day. But he's about to lose Samantha, his meteorologist girlfriend and secret weapon, because he just brushes off all these climate change disasters as 'weird weather.'

"Jake's world is turned upside down when he meets Rita Ten Grieve, a mysterious woman with a futuristic technology called the Nimbus that takes him back and forth through time. Will his thrilling journey of self-discovery force Jake to confront the reality of climate change and help him win back Samantha?"

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (32 ratings)
ISBN 978-0991377077 ?
Defiant Earth:
The Fate of Humans in the Anthropocene
Clive Hamilton
Polity (June, 2017)
No Review

"Humans have become so powerful that we have disrupted the functioning of the Earth System as a whole, bringing on a new geological epoch — the Anthropocene — one in which the serene and clement conditions that allowed civilisation to flourish are disappearing and we quail before 'the wakened giant'. The emergence of a conscious creature capable of using technology to bring about a rupture in the Earth's geochronology is an event of monumental significance, on a par with the arrival of civilisation itself.

"What does it mean to have arrived at this point, where human history and Earth history collide? Some interpret the Anthropocene as no more than a development of what they already know, obscuring and deflating its profound significance. But the Anthropocene demands that we rethink everything. The modern belief in the free, reflexive being making its own future by taking control of its environment — even to the point of geoengineering — is now impossible because we have rendered the Earth more unpredictable and less controllable, a disobedient planet.

At the same time, all attempts by progressives to cut humans down to size by attacking anthropocentrism come up against the insurmountable fact that human beings now possess enough power to change the Earth's course. It's too late to turn back the geological clock, and there is no going back to premodern ways of thinking. We must face the fact that humans are at the centre of the world, even if we must give the idea that we can control the planet. These truths call for a new kind of anthropocentrism, a philosophy by which we might use our power responsibly and find a way to live on a defiant Earth."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.9 (12 ratings)
ISBN 978-1509519743 ?
Which World?:
Global Destinies, Regional Choices: Scenarios for the 21st Century
Allen Hammond
Washington, DC: Island Press, June 1998
My Review

"In Which World?, scientist Allen Hammond imaginatively probes the consequences of present social, economic, and environmental trends to construct three possible worlds that could await us in the twenty-first century: Market World, in which economic and human progress is driven by the liberating power of free markets and human initiative; Fortress World, in which unattended social and environmental problems diminish progress, dooming hundreds of millions of humans to lives of rising conflict and violence; and Transformed World, in which human ingenuity and compassion succeed in offering a better life, not just a wealthier one, and in seeking to extend those benefits to all of humanity." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (2 ratings)
ISBN 978-1-55963-575-2 SJ3 330.9051 Hammond
CLIMATE CHANGE and the road to NET-ZERO:
Science • Technology • Economics • Politics
Dr Mathew Hampshire-Waugh
Crowstone Publishing (May 14, 2021)
No Review
"Dr Mathew Hampshire-Waugh has spent the last decade working as an equity analyst at a global investment bank. He has worked with the top executives of many multi-billion-dollar companies and built relationships with many of the world’s largest investment managers. Mathew’s work centred on forecasting technology trends, financial performance, and the intrinsic value of companies involved in markets including renewable energy, electric cars, battery technology, and biofuels. The author gained his doctorate in materials chemistry from University College London, where he worked on novel coatings and nano-materials for use in energy-saving glazing and solar panel design. During his doctorate Mathew registered a patent for an efficiency enhancing coating for solar modules, published numerous scientific papers, and engaged in public speaking, consultancy, and media outreach."

"CLIMATE CHANGE and the road to NET-ZERO is a story of how humanity has broken free from the shackles of poverty, suffering, and war and for the first time in human history grown both population and prosperity. It’s also a story of how a single species has reconfigured the natural world, repurposed the Earth’s resources, and begun to re-engineer the climate. The book uses these conflicting narratives to explore the science, economics, technology, and politics of climate change. NET-ZERO blows away the entrenched idea that solving global warming requires a trade-off between the economy and environment, present and future generations, or rich and poor, and reveals why a twenty-year transition to a zero carbon system is a win-win solution for all on planet Earth.

"Updated for the latest IPCC science."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (79 ratings)
ISBN 978-1527287969 ?
Stolen Focus:
Why You Can't Pay Attention—and How to Think Deeply Again
Johann Hari
Crown (January 25, 2022)
No Review
"Johann Hari is a writer and journalist. He has written for The New York Times, Le Monde, The Guardian, and other newspapers. His TED Talks have been viewed over 70 million times, and his work has been praised by a broad range of people, from Oprah Winfrey to Noam Chomsky to Joe Rogan."

"In the United States, teenagers can focus on one task for only sixty-five seconds at a time, and office workers average only three minutes. Like so many of us, Johann Hari was finding that constantly switching from device to device and tab to tab was a diminishing and depressing way to live. He tried all sorts of self-help solutions—even abandoning his phone for three months—but nothing seemed to work. So Hari went on an epic journey across the world to interview the leading experts on human attention—and he discovered that everything we think we know about this crisis is wrong.

"We think our inability to focus is a personal failure to exert enough willpower over our devices. The truth is even more disturbing: our focus has been stolen by powerful external forces that have left us uniquely vulnerable to corporations determined to raid our attention for profit. Hari found that there are twelve deep causes of this crisis, from the decline of mind-wandering to rising pollution, all of which have robbed some of our attention. In Stolen Focus, he introduces readers to Silicon Valley dissidents who learned to hack human attention, and veterinarians who diagnose dogs with ADHD. He explores a favela in Rio de Janeiro where everyone lost their attention in a particularly surreal way, and an office in New Zealand that discovered a remarkable technique to restore workers’ productivity.

"Crucially, Hari learned how we can reclaim our focus—as individuals, and as a society—if we are determined to fight for it. Stolen Focus will transform the debate about attention and finally show us how to get it back."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (3,462 ratings)
ISBN 978-0593138519 ?
A Climate for Change:
Global Warming Facts for Faith-Based Decisions
Katherine Hayhoe & Andrew Farley
FaithWords; 1st edition (October, 2009)
No Review

"Global warming: it's one of the hottest scientific and political issues of today. And yet we've all found ourselves asking . . .

  • It's freezing outside—where's global warming now?
  • Climate is always changing—how do we know this isn't just a cycle?
  • Why should Christians care about global warming when we know the world won't end that way?

"For all the talk about climate change, there's still a great deal of debate about what it all means, especially among Christians. A Climate for Change offers straightforward answers to these questions, without the spin. This book untangles the complex science and tackles many long-held misconceptions about global warming. Authored by a climate scientist and a pastor, A Climate for Change boldly explores the role our Christian faith can play in guiding our opinions on this important global issue.

One reviewer devotes 1,599 words to a one-star review of this book. "I will be blunt," he says. "This volume, in my opinion, is an intellectual, scientific and theological travesty—even if they are correct on the science, and in that I remain a sceptic due to the total lack of credibility of the science community." As is typical, he means "Except for the contrarian scientists who say what I like to hear."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (70 ratings)
ISBN 978-0446549561 ?
Saving Us:
A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World
Katherine Hayhoe
Atria/One Signal Publishers (September 21, 2021)
No Review

"Called 'one of the nation's most effective communicators on climate change' by The New York Times, Katharine Hayhoe knows how to navigate all sides of the conversation on our changing planet. A Canadian climate scientist living in Texas, she negotiates distrust of data, indifference to imminent threats, and resistance to proposed solutions with ease. Over the past fifteen years Hayhoe has found that the most important thing we can do to address climate change is talk about it—and she wants to teach you how.

"In Saving Us, Hayhoe argues that when it comes to changing hearts and minds, facts are only one part of the equation. We need to find shared values in order to connect our unique identities to collective action. This is not another doomsday narrative about a planet on fire. It is a multilayered look at science, faith, and human psychology, from an icon in her field—recently named chief scientist at The Nature Conservancy.

"Drawing on interdisciplinary research and personal stories, Hayhoe shows that small conversations can have astonishing results. Saving Us leaves us with the tools to open a dialogue with your loved ones about how we all can play a role in pushing forward for change." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (11 ratings)
ISBN 978-1982143831 ?
Afterburn:
Society Beyond Fossil Fuels
Richard Heinberg
New Society Publishers (April, 2015)
No Review

"Climate change, along with the depletion of oil, coal, and gas, dictate that we will inevitably move away from our profound societal reliance on fossil fuels; but just how big a transformation will this be? While many policy-makers assume that renewable energy sources will provide an easy "plug-and-play" solution, author Richard Heinberg suggests instead that we are in for a wild ride; a "civilization reboot" on a scale similar to the agricultural and industrial revolutions." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (12 ratings)
ISBN 978-0865717886 ?
It's Getting Hot in Here:
The Past, Present, and Future of Climate Change
Age Range: 12 years and up | Grade Level: 7 - 9 | Lexile Measure: 1180L
Bridget Heos
Clarion Books; Illustrated edition (February 23, 2016)
No Review

"Tackling the issue of global warming head-on for a teen audience, Bridget Heos examines the science behind it, the history of climate change on our planet, and the ways in which humans have affected the current crisis we face. It’s Getting Hot in Here illustrates how interconnected we are not just with everyone else on the planet, but with the people who came before us and the ones who will inherit the planet after us. This eye-opening approach to one of today’s most pressing issues focuses on the past human influences, the current state of affairs, the grim picture for the future—and how young readers can help to make a positive change."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (3 ratings)
ISBN 978-0544303478 ?
Living in a Low-Carbon Society in 2050
(Energy, Climate and the Environment)
Horace Herring (editor)
Palgrave Macmillan (October 2012)
No Review

"Combining theory, case studies and speculative fiction, a range of contributors, from leading UK academics to pioneering renewable activists, create a compelling picture of the potential perks and pitfalls of a low carbon future." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0230282254 ?
How Culture Shapes the Climate Change Debate
Andrew J. Hoffman
Stanford Briefs (March, 2015)
No Review

"Synthesizing evidence from sociology, psychology, and political science, Andrew J. Hoffman lays bare the opposing cultural lenses through which science is interpreted. He then extracts lessons from major cultural shifts in the past to engender a better understanding of the problem and motivate the public to take action. How Culture Shapes the Climate Change Debate makes a powerful case for a more scientifically literate public, a more socially engaged scientific community, and a more thoughtful mode of public discourse." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (41 ratings)
ISBN 978-0804794220 ?
Climate Cover-Up:
The Crusade To Deny Global Warming
James Hoggan
Richard Littlemore
Vancouver: Greystone Books, September 2009
My Review

"Canadian environmental activists Hoggan and Littlemore pull no punches in this spirited indictment of global warming deniers. Their well-sourced research spotlights premeditated prevarications about the threat of greenhouse gas emissions by the oil and coal industry, in league with junk scientists, compliant conservative politicians and unsavory public relations practitioners. Persistent obfuscation of science by these anti-environment players is further abetted, say the authors, by a manipulated media that, in a misguided effort toward journalistic balance, pairs scientific certainty about an encroaching climate crisis with quotations from people who make a living denying it." – Publishers Weekly

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.1 (101 ratings)
ISBN 978-1-55365-485-8 ?
The Displacements:
A Novel
Bruce Holsinger
Riverhead Books (July 5, 2022)
No Review
"Bruce Holsinger is the author of The Gifted School, which won the Colorado Book Award. His essays have appeared in The New York Times, the New York Review of Books, Vanity Fair, and many other publications. His nonfiction books have won numerous awards from the Modern Language Association, the Medieval Academy of America, and other organizations. He teaches at the University of Virginia and is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship. The Displacements is his fourth novel.

An adrenaline-fueled story of lives upended and transformed by an unprecedented catastrophe

"To all appearances, the Larsen-Hall family has everything: healthy children, a stable marriage, a lucrative career for Brantley, and the means for Daphne to pursue her art full-time. Their deluxe new Miami life has just clicked into place when Luna—the world’s first category 6 hurricane—upends everything they have taken for granted.

"When the storm makes landfall, it triggers a descent of another sort. Their home destroyed, two of its members missing, and finances abruptly cut off, the family finds everything they assumed about their lives now up for grabs. Swept into a mass rush of evacuees from across the American South, they are transported hundreds of miles to a FEMA megashelter where their new community includes an insurance-agent-turned-drug dealer, a group of vulnerable children, and a dedicated relief worker trying to keep the peace. Will “normal” ever return?

"A suspenseful read plotted on a vast national tapestry, The Displacements thrillingly explores what happens when privilege is lost and resilience is tested in a swiftly changing world."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (681 ratings)
ISBN 978-0593189719 ?
The Future Earth:
A Radical Vision for What's Possible in the Age of Warming
Eric Holthaus
HarperOne (June 30, 2020)
No Review

"The basics of climate science are easy. We know it is entirely human-caused. Which means its solutions will be similarly human-led. In The Future Earth, leading climate change advocate and weather-related journalist Eric Holthaus ("the Rebel Nerd of Meteorology" –Rolling Stone) offers a radical vision of our future, specifically how to reverse the short- and long-term effects of climate change over the next three decades. Anchored by world-class reporting, interviews with futurists, climatologists, biologists, economists, and climate change activists, it shows what the world could look like if we implemented radical solutions on the scale of the crises we face.

  • What could happen if we reduced carbon emissions by 50 percent in the next decade?
  • What could living in a city look like in 2030?
  • How could the world operate in 2040, if the proposed Green New Deal created a 100 percent net carbon-free economy in the United States?

"This is the book for anyone who feels overwhelmed by the current state of our environment. Hopeful and prophetic, The Future Earth invites us to imagine how we can reverse the effects of climate change in our own lifetime and encourages us to enter a deeper relationship with the earth as conscientious stewards and to re-affirm our commitment to one another in our shared humanity."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (65 ratings)
ISBN 978-0062883162 ?
The Transition Handbook:
From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience
Rob Hopkins
UIT Cambridge Ltd. (April, 2014)
No Review

"Most people don't want to think about what happens when the oil runs out (or becomes prohibitively expensive), but The Transition Handbook shows how the inevitable and profound changes ahead can have a positive effect. They can lead to the rebirth of local communities, which will generate their own fuel, food and housing. They can encourage the development of local currencies, to keep money in the local area. They can unleash a local 'skilling-up', so that people have more control over their lives."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (30 ratings)
ISBN 978-0857842152 ?
After the Apocalypse
Srećko Horvat
Polity (May 11, 2021)
No Review

"In this post-apocalyptic rollercoaster ride, philosopher Srećko Horvat invites us to explore the Apocalypse in terms of ‘revelation’ (rather than as the ‘end’ itself). He argues that the only way to prevent the end – i.e., extinction – is to engage in a close reading of various interconnected threats, such as climate crisis, the nuclear age and the ongoing pandemic. Drawing on the work of neglected philosopher Günther Anders, this book outlines a philosophical approach to deal with what Horvat, borrowing a term from climate science and giving it a theological twist, calls ‘eschatological tipping points’. These are no longer just the nuclear age or climate crisis, but their collision, conjoined with various other major threats – not only pandemics, but also the viruses of capitalism and fascism. In his investigation of the future of places such as Chernobyl, the Mediterranean and the Marshall Islands, as well as many others affected by COVID-19, Horvat contends that the ‘revelation’ appears simple and unprecedented: the alternatives are no longer socialism or barbarism – our only alternatives today are a radical reinvention of the world, or mass extinction.

"After the Apocalypse is an urgent call not only to mourn tomorrow’s dead today but to struggle for our future while we can."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.8 (6 ratings)
ISBN 978-1509540082 ?
Why We Disagree about Climate Change:
Understanding Controversy, Inaction and Opportunity
Mike Hulme
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, May 2009
No Review

"Climate change is not 'a problem' waiting for 'a solution'. It is an environmental, cultural and political phenomenon which is re-shaping the way we think about ourselves, our societies and humanity's place on Earth. Drawing upon twenty-five years of professional work as an international climate change scientist and public commentator, Mike Hulme provides a unique insider's account of the emergence of this phenomenon and the diverse ways in which it is understood." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (17 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-521-89869-0 SJ8 QC981.8.?
Green Valley:
A Climate Change Novel
Anne Ipsen
Goldman Group, Ibus Press (May 15, 2017)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0982877852 ?
Memory of Water:
A Novel
Emmi Itäranta
Harper Voyager (June, 2014)
No Review

"Global warming has changed the world's geography and its politics. Wars are waged over water, and China rules Europe, including the Scandinavian Union, which is occupied by the power state of New Qian. In this far north place, seventeen-year-old Noria Kaitio is learning to become a tea master like her father, a position that holds great responsibility and great secrets. Tea masters alone know the location of hidden water sources, including the natural spring that Noria's father tends, which once provided water for her whole village.

"But secrets do not stay hidden forever, and after her father's death the army starts watching their town—and Noria. And as water becomes even scarcer, Noria must choose between safety and striking out, between knowledge and kinship." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (106 ratings)
ISBN 978-0062326157 ?
The Citizen's Guide to Climate Success:
Overcoming Myths that Hinder Progress
Mark Jaccard
Cambridge University Press (February 13, 2020)
No Review

"Sometimes solving climate change seems impossibly complex, and it is hard to know what changes we all can and should make to help. This book offers hope. Drawing on the latest research, Mark Jaccard shows us how to recognize the absolutely essential actions (decarbonizing electricity and transport) and policies (regulations that phase out coal plants and gasoline vehicles, carbon tariffs). Rather than feeling paralyzed and pursuing ineffective efforts, we can all make a few key changes in our lifestyles to reduce emissions, to contribute to the urgently needed affordable energy transition in developed and developing countries. More importantly, Jaccard shows how to distinguish climate-sincere from insincere politicians and increase the chance of electing and sustaining these leaders in power. In combining the personal and the political, The Citizen's Guide to Climate Success offers a clear and simple strategic path to solving the greatest problem of our times. A PDF version of this title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core at doi.org/10.1017/9781108783453."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (4 ratings)
ISBN 978-1108479370 ?
No Miracles Needed:
How Today's Technology Can Save Our Climate and Clean Our Air
Mark Z. Jacobson
Cambridge University Press; New edition (February 2, 2023)
No Review

"Mark Z. Jacobson is a professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Director of the Atmosphere/Energy Program at Stanford University. He has published six books and over 175 peer-reviewed papers. His work forms the scientific basis of the Green New Deal and many laws and commitments for cities, states, and countries to transition to 100% renewable electricity and heat generation. He received the 2018 Judi Friedman Lifetime Achievement Award, and in 2019, was selected as 'one of the world's 100 most influential people in climate policy' by Apolitical. He has served on an advisory committee to the U.S. Secretary of Energy, appeared in a TED talk, appeared on the David Letterman Show, and co-founded The Solutions Project."

"The world needs to turn away from fossil fuels and use clean, renewable sources of energy as soon as we can. Failure to do so will cause catastrophic climate damage sooner than you might think, leading to loss of biodiversity and economic and political instability. But all is not lost! We still have time to save the planet without resorting to 'miracle' technologies. We need to wave goodbye to outdated technologies, such as natural gas and carbon capture, and repurpose the technologies that we already have at our disposal. We can use existing technologies to harness, store, and transmit energy from wind, water, and solar sources to ensure reliable electricity, heat supplies, and energy security. Find out what you can do to improve the health, climate, and economic state of our planet. Together, we can solve the climate crisis, eliminate air pollution and safely secure energy supplies for everyone."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.1 (16 ratings)
ISBN 978-1009249546 ?
All We Can Save:
Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis
Ayana Elizabeth Johnson & Katharine K. Wilkinson (Editors)
One World (September 22, 2020)
No Review

"There is a renaissance blooming in the climate movement: leadership that is more characteristically feminine and more faithfully feminist, rooted in compassion, connection, creativity, and collaboration. While it's clear that women and girls are vital voices and agents of change for this planet, they are too often missing or even barred from the proverbial table. More than a problem of bias, it's a dynamic that sets us up for failure.

"All We Can Save illuminates the expertise and insights of dozens of diverse women leading on climate in the United States—scientists, journalists, farmers, strategists, teachers, activists, innovators, builders, and designers, across ages, geographies, and ethnicities—and aims to advance a more representative, nuanced, and solution-oriented public conversation on the climate crisis. These women are offering a spectrum of ideas and insights for how we can rapidly, radically reshape society.

"Intermixing essays with poetry and art, this book is both a balm and a guide for knowing and holding what has been done to the world, while bolstering our resolve never to give up on one another or our collective future. We must summon truth, courage, and solutions, to turn away from the brink and toward life-giving possibility. Curated by two climate leaders, All We Can Save is a collection and celebration of visionaries who are leading us on a path toward all we can save."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0593237069 ?
Carbon Nation
Fossil Fuels in the Making of American Culture
Bob Johnson
University Press of Kansas (December, 2014)
No Review

"Carbon Nation ranges across film and literary studies, ecology, politics, journalism, and art history to chart the course by which prehistoric carbon calories entered into the American economy and body. It reveals how fossil fuels remade our ways of being, knowing, and sensing in the world while examining how different classes, races, sexes, and conditions learned to embrace and navigate the material manifestations and cultural potential of these new prehistoric carbons."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0700620043 ?
Though the Earth Gives Way:
A Novel
Mark Johnson
Bancroft Press (January 11, 2022)
No Review

"Mark Johnson, a health and science reporter for The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, shared the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. He has been a Pulitzer finalist on three other occasions. His reporting has been anthologized in three editions of The Best American Newspaper Narratives.

"Before moving to Milwaukee, Johnson was a reporter at The Providence (R.I.) Journal-Bulletin, The Rockford (Il) Register Star, The Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette, and weekly Provincetown (Mass.) Advocate. He is a graduate of The University of Toronto. This is his first novel. He and his wife, the writer and editor Mary-Liz Shaw, rode out the pandemic with their son, composer Evan Johnson, and his partner, Socks Whitmore, at their home in Fox Point, Wisconsin."

"Mark Johnson tells a timeless tale of the struggle to find truth in belief, faith in fact, and friendship in times of fear. It is a new survival story, one that takes place post-climate apocalypse where our main character, Elon, thirty-seven, alone, hungry, and desperate to hear just another voice, is determined to discover what is next for a world sunken and on fire. When Elon discovers a hidden retreat deep in the woods of Northern Michigan, he soon finds himself on the verge of regeneration, as a pack of loners band together amidst a society turned hostile and an environment turned violent. No longer must he travel alone with his shopping cart, his jug of gasoline, and rotten crabapples. Now, he has the chance to rediscover friendship and intimacy. Johnson's novel asks the question―what would it take to start over?―and readers walk away from Elon's story pondering their own responsibility to the climate-challenged world outside their own front yards. The chapters read like campfire tales, and Johnson's lyrical voice heightens Elon's perceptions of shame, guilt, and accountability. The setting of this treacherous world creates an intriguing backdrop as each night the new residents of the Kenneally Retreat Center slowly reveal stories from their lives before. These stories are admissions of guilt, secrets, failures, and grief, and they challenge our ability to forgive. Johnson uses the art of story-telling to critique the categorizing nature of the American identity."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (13 ratings)
978-1610885478 ?
Climate Courage:
How Tackling Climate Change Can Build Community, Transform the Economy,
and Bridge the Political Divide in America
Andreas Karelas
Katharine Hayhoe (Foreword)
Beacon Press (September 29, 2020)
No Review

"Andreas Karelas has a message we don’t often hear: we have all the tools we need to solve the climate crisis and doing so will improve our lives, our economy, and our society.

"But to engage people in the climate fight, we need stories that are empowering, inclusive, and solutions-oriented, not based in fear. Karelas digs into the latest data on the rapidly falling costs and increased efficiencies of clean energy technologies compared to fossil fuels, looks at the rate of job creation in the clean energy sector, and introduces the reader to the inspiring work of climate heroes on both sides of the aisle—from Republican mayors and governors to activists, from businesses to faith communities.

"Climate Courage shows us how we can move past our collective inaction on climate change and work together in our communities to create a more sustainable, just, clean energy–powered economy that works for everyone."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (3 ratings)
ISBN 978-0807084885 ?
Move:
The Forces Uprooting Us
Parag Khanna
Scribner (October 12, 2021)
No Review

"In the 60,000 years since people began colonizing the continents, a recurring feature of human civilization has been mobility—the ever-constant search for resources and stability. Seismic global events—wars and genocides, revolutions and pandemics—have only accelerated the process. The map of humanity isn’t settled—not now, not ever.

"As climate change tips toward full-blown crisis, economies collapse, governments destabilize, and technology disrupts, we’re entering a new age of mass migrations—one that will scatter both the dispossessed and the well-off. Which areas will people abandon and where will they resettle? Which countries will accept or reject them? As today’s world population, which includes four billion restless youth, votes with their feet, what map of human geography will emerge?

"In Move, celebrated futurist Parag Khanna provides an illuminating and authoritative vision of the next phase of human civilization—one that is both mobile and sustainable. As the book explores, in the years ahead people will move people (sic) to where the resources are and technologies will flow to the people who need them, returning us to our nomadic roots while building more secure habitats.

"Move is a fascinating look at the deep trends that are shaping the most likely scenarios for the future. Most important, it guides each of us as we determine our optimal location on humanity’s ever-changing map."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (17 ratings)
ISBN 978-1982168971 ?
A Guide to the Climate Apocalypse:
Our Journey from the Age of Prosperity to the Era of Environmental Grief
Vítêzslav Kremlík
Václav Klaus (Foreword)
Identity Publications (December 6, 2021)
No Review

"In A Guide to the Climate Apocalypse, Vítêzslav Kremlík delivers a refreshing and objective analysis of the history and science behind climate change. Books about climate change frequently endorse a narrow, often malicious angle of total indoctrination or abject denial of the official story. Kremlík employs a direct and detailed critique of not only the studies that have led to our current understanding of large-scale changes in the weather but also the political biases and motives behind global action taken in response to it.

"Proceed step-by-step through the history of how we came to understand everything we currently do about climate change, including natural climate cycles, modern carbon footprints and pollution, periods of extreme weather, ocean acidification, biofuels, climate doomsayers, hockey stick graphs, and our dear old friend Al Gore.

"Kremlík’s informative guide offers an expert-backed new perspective on the history and politics of our understanding of climate change and the agendas behind those who speak most vocally on it or enforce policies that affect us all. With well-researched and cited real-world findings and examples, it calls all of us to wake up to an accurate and educated view of what is and has been happening to our planet—and what we ought or ought not to do about it.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (60 ratings)
ISBN 978-1945884535 ?
Feasible Planet:
A Guide to More Sustainable Living
Ken Kroes
1779671 Alberta Inc. (November, 2017)
No Review

"Real facts, motivations, and consequences for actions all form a solid foundation from which Feasible Planet advocates changes that support economic growth, lifestyle improvement, and both social and environmental consciousness. It's difficult to impart all this without sounding 'preachy' or dogmatic, but another big difference between Ken Kroes and his contemporaries is that his book is invitational and contemplative; not a lecture that makes harsh judgment calls or promotes hard-line approaches." – D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (17 ratings)
ISBN 978-0995847040 ?
EcoMind:
Changing the Way We Think, to Create the World We Want
Frances Moore Lappe
Nation Books (September, 2011)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (37 ratings)
ISBN 978-1568586830 ?
Active Hope:
How to Face the Mess We're in without Going Crazy
Joanna Macy & Chris Johnstone
New World Library (March, 2012)
No Review

"The challenges we face can be difficult even to think about. Climate change, the depletion of oil, economic upheaval, and mass extinction together create a planetary emergency of overwhelming proportions. Active Hope shows us how to strengthen our capacity to face this crisis so that we can respond with unexpected resilience and creative power. Drawing on decades of teaching an empowerment approach known as the Work That Reconnects, the authors guide us through a transformational process informed by mythic journeys, modern psychology, spirituality, and holistic science. This process equips us with tools to face the mess we're in and play our role in the collective transition, or Great Turning, to a life-sustaining society."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (70 ratings)
ISBN 978-1577319726 ?
Don't Even Think About It:
Why Our Brains Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change
George Marshall
Bloomsbury USA, August 2014
No Review

"Most of us recognize that climate change is real, and yet we do nothing to stop it. What is this psychological mechanism that allows us to know something is true but act as if it is not? George Marshall's search for the answers brings him face to face with Nobel Prize-winning psychologists and the activists of the Texas Tea Party; the world's leading climate scientists and the people who denounce them; liberal environmentalists and conservative evangelicals." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.5 (61 ratings)
ISBN 978-1620401330 SJ3 363.7387 Marshall
Our Changing Earth:
Why Climate Change Matters to Young People
Arjun Marwaha
Independently published (January 17, 2019)
No Review

"Between the years 2030 and 2050, a quarter of a million people per year will lose their lives to climate change. Blazing temperatures and catastrophic weather are well-known climate change effects, but these simply do not compare with health-related effects: the transmission of water-borne and vector-borne disease. Arjun Marwaha, a high schooler with a passion for STEM, has committed himself to foster awareness for climate change among the youth of today. In Our Changing Earth, he delves into how our planet will be altered in response to climate change, and why this is relevant particularly to young people. Looking forward, Arjun hopes to promote awareness among all humans for the greatest threat to humanity in the 21st century and beyond: climate change."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (4 ratings)
ISBN 978-1794277199 SJ eBook
Hothouse Earth:
An Inhabitant’s Guide
Bill McGuire
Icon Books (October 18, 2022)
No Review

"We inhabit a planet in peril. Our once temperate world is locked on course to become a hothouse entirely of our own making.

"Hothouse Earth: an Inhabitant's Guide provides a post-COP26 perspective on the climate emergency, acknowledging that it is now practically impossible to keep this side of the 1.5°C dangerous climate change guardrail. The upshot is that we can no longer dodge the arrival of a disastrous, all-pervasive climate breakdown that will come as a hammer blow to global society and economy.

"Bill McGuire, Professor of Geophysical and Climate Hazards, explains the science behind the climate crisis, painting a blunt but authentic picture of the sort of world our children will grow old in, and our grandchildren grow up in; a world that we catch only glimpses of in today's blistering heatwaves, calamitous wildfires and ruinous floods and droughts.

"Bleak though it is, the picture is one we must all face up to, if only to spur genuine action - even at this late stage - to stop a harrowing future becoming a truly cataclysmic one."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1794277199 SJ eBook
The Climate Change Playbook:
22 Systems Thinking Games for More Effective Communication about Climate Change
Dennis Meadows, Linda Booth Sweeney Ed.D., & Gillian Martin Mehers
Chelsea Green Publishing (May, 2016)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 review)
ISBN 978-1603586764 ?
Cloud Atlas: A Novel
David Mitchell
Random House Trade Paperbacks (August, 2004)
No Review

"Cloud Atlas begins in 1850 with Adam Ewing, an American notary voyaging from the Chatham Isles to his home in California. Along the way, Ewing is befriended by a physician, Dr. Goose, who begins to treat him for a rare species of brain parasite. . . . Abruptly, the action jumps to Belgium in 1931, where Robert Frobisher, a disinherited bisexual composer, contrives his way into the household of an infirm maestro who has a beguiling wife and a nubile daughter. . . . From there we jump to the West Coast in the 1970s and a troubled reporter named Luisa Rey, who stumbles upon a web of corporate greed and murder that threatens to claim her life. . . . And onward, with dazzling virtuosity, to an inglorious present-day England; to a Korean superstate of the near future where neocapitalism has run amok; and, finally, to a postapocalyptic Iron Age Hawaii in the last days of history.

"But the story doesn't end even there. The narrative then boomerangs back through centuries and space, returning by the same route, in reverse, to its starting point. Along the way, Mitchell reveals how his disparate characters connect, how their fates intertwine, and how their souls drift across time like clouds across the sky.

"As wild as a videogame, as mysterious as a Zen koan, Cloud Atlas is an unforgettable tour de force that, like its incomparable author, has transcended its cult classic status to become a worldwide phenomenon."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (2,332 ratings)
ISBN 978-0375507250 ?
Unscientific America
How Scientific Illiteracy Threatens Our Future
Chris Mooney & Sheril Kirshenbaum
New York: Harcourt, Inc., July 2009
My Review

The causes of America's illiteracy about matters of science, Mooney and Kirshenbaum find, is not only poor k-12 education; aloofness from scientists and profit-driven journalism bear a large portion of the blame. The authors call for scientists to step up and explain their work to the public, via reporters and any other means necessary.

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.1 (75 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-465-01305-0 SJ3 509.73 Mooney
The Temple at the End of the Universe:
A Search for Spirituality in the Anthropocene
Josiah Neufeld
House of Anansi Press (June 6, 2023)
No Review
"Josiah Neufeld is an award-winning journalist who grew up as an expatriate in Burkina Faso and returned to Canada as a young adult. His essays, journalism, and short fiction have been published in the Walrus, Hazlitt, the Globe and Mail, Eighteen Bridges, the Ottawa Citizen, the Vancouver Sun, Utne Reader, Prairie Fire, and the New Quarterly. He lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba." – Amazon biography

"A journalistic memoir by a lapsed evangelical Christian that examines how the ecological crisis is shifting the ground of religious faith

"Our species is leaving scars on the earth that will last for millennia. How has religious ideology helped bring humanity to the brink of catastrophe? What new expressions of faith might help us respond with grace, self-sacrifice, and love? What will spark our compassion, transcend our divisions, and spur us to action?

"Josiah Neufeld explores how the interlocking crises of climate change have shifted the ground of religious faith on a quest that is both philosophical and deeply personal. As the son of Christian missionaries based in Burkina Faso, Neufeld grew up aware of his privilege in an unjust world. His faith gave way to skepticism as he realized the fundamental injustice underpinning evangelical Christianity: only a minority would be saved, and the rest would be damned.

"He was left, though, with an understanding of how people’s actions are influenced by spiritual motives and religious convictions, and of how a framework of faith can counter one’s sense of personal powerlessness. The Temple at the End of the Universe is the rallying cry for a new spiritual paradigm for the Anthropocene."

Rating by Amazon customers:? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-1635573190 ?
Global Environmental Politics:
From Person To Planet
Simon Nicholson & Paul Wapner
Routledge (September, 2014)
No Review

"I am currently using the Nicholson and Wapner reader as my primary text in a sustainable development course, so I've had the opportunity to see the book in action with students. The book is extremely well organized, initially framing the momentous global environmental challenge that humanity faces, then drilling down into some specific issues, e.g. climate and water. The next few sections focus on the primary actors in global environmental politics, with an excellent slate of readings on the role of the State, markets, and disadvantaged actors. Finally, there is an extensive range of readings that leave students with a sense of hope, suggesting how we can transform society at virtually every scale of analysis. Each section also has a useful class exercise that helps to introduce the important issues and engage students in active learning. My experience with students to date is that they engaged well with this book and seem enthusiastic each week about the readings. Overall, I would rate this a highly valuable introduction to this topic." – Dr. Wil Burns

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (? ratings)
ISBN 978-1612056494 ?
Life in the Ocean:
The Story of Oceanographer Sylvia Earle
Age Range: 4 - 8 years | Grade Level: 1 - 2 | Lexile Measure: NC1170L
Claire A. Nivola (Author & Illustrator)
Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) (March, 2012)
No Review

"Sylvia Earle first lost her heart to the ocean as a young girl when she discovered the wonders of the Gulf of Mexico in her backyard. As an adult, she dives even deeper. Whether she's designing submersibles, swimming with the whales, or taking deep-water walks, Sylvia Earle has dedicated her life to learning more about what she calls "the blue heart of the planet." With stunningly detailed pictures of the wonders of the sea, Life in the Ocean tells the story of Sylvia's growing passion and how her ocean exploration and advocacy have made her known around the world. This picture book biography also includes an informative author's note that will motivate young environmentalists."

"Life in the Ocean is one of The Washington Post's Best Kids Books of 2012"

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (32 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374380687 ?
The Collapse of Western Civilization:
A View from the Future
Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway
Columbia University Press (October, 2014)
My Review

The authors of Merchants of Doubt present this novel as a parable to warn us against keeping on with business as usual.

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (300 ratings)
ISBN 978-0-231-16954-7 ?
At Home on an Unruly Planet:
Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth
Madeline Ostrander
Henry Holt and Co. (August 2, 2022)
No Review
Madeline Ostrander is a science journalist and writer whose work has appeared in the NewYorker.com, The Nation, Sierra magazine, PBS's NOVA Next, Slate, and numerous other outlets. Her reporting on climate change and environmental justice has taken her to locations such as the Alaskan Arctic and the Australian outback. She's received grants, fellowships, and residencies from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Artist Trust, the USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism, the Fund for Investigative Journalism, the Jack Straw Cultural Center, the Mesa Refuge, Hedgebrook, and Edith Cowan University in Australia. She is the former senior editor of YES! magazine and holds a master's degree in environmental science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She lives in Seattle with her husband." – Amazon biography

"How do we find a sense of home and rootedness in a time of unprecedented upheaval? What happens when the seasons and rhythms in which we have built our lives go off-kilter?

"Once a distant forecast, climate change is now reaching into the familiar, threatening our basic safety and forcing us to reexamine who we are and how we live. In At Home on an Unruly Planet, science journalist Madeline Ostrander reflects on this crisis not as an abstract scientific or political problem but as a palpable force that is now affecting all of us at home. She offers vivid accounts of people fighting to protect places they love from increasingly dangerous circumstances. A firefighter works to rebuild her town after catastrophic western wildfires. A Florida preservationist strives to protect one of North America's most historic cities from rising seas. An urban farmer struggles to transform a California city plagued by fossil fuel disasters. An Alaskan community heads for higher ground as its land erodes.

"Ostrander pairs deeply reported stories of hard-won optimism with lyrical essays on the strengths we need in an era of crisis. The book is required reading for anyone who wants to make a home in the twenty-first century."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.8 (9 reviews)
ISBN 978-1250620514 ?
Tropic of Chaos:
Climate Change and the New Geography of Violence
Christian Parenti
Nation Books (June, 2011)
No Review
Christian Parenti is a contributing editor at The Nation. The author of Lockdown America, The Soft Cage, and The Freedom, he has written for Fortune, Mother Jones, Conde Nast Traveler, Playboy, the New York Times, and the London Review of Books, among others. He lives in Brooklyn, New York."

"In Tropic of Chaos, investigative journalist Christian Parenti travels along the front lines of this gathering catastrophe—the belt of economically and politically battered postcolonial nations and war zones girding the planet's midlatitudes. Here he finds failed states amid climatic disasters. But he also reveals the unsettling presence of Western military forces and explains how they see an opportunity in the crisis to prepare for open-ended global counterinsurgency." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (1 review)
ISBN 978-1568586007 SJ8 QC991.A1.C55x
Global Crisis:
War, Climate Change and Catastrophe in the Seventeenth Century
Geoffrey Parker
New Haven: Yale University Press (April, 2013)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (45 ratings)
ISBN 978-0300153231 ?
How to Get Expelled from School:
A Guide to Climate Change for Pupils, Parents and Punters
Ian Plimer
Connor Court Publishing Pty Ltd (January, 2012)
No Review

"Are pupils, parents and the public being fed political propaganda on climate change? Now is your chance to find out. Professor Plimer gives 101 simple questions with answers for you to ask teachers, activists, journalists and politicians. The climate industry adjusts the temperature record and withholds raw data, computer codes and information from scrutiny. Computer predictions of a scary future don't agree with measurements. Past natural climate changes have been larger and more rapid than the worst case predictions yet humans adapted. Is human-induced global warming the biggest financial and scientific scam in history? If it is, we will pay dearly."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (13 ratings)
ISBN 978-1921421808 ?
Extinction in a Human World:
The Environmental Cost of Human Progress
T. Thomas Rathe
Independently published (July 20, 2023)
No Review
"T. Thomas Rathe is a lifelong nature and science enthusiast. This passion led him initially to a degree in biology and the study of cellular and molecular biology. Now as a writer, blogger, history buff, and amateur naturalist, he spends his time writing and researching Earth's fantastic life and the threats it faces."

"Combining frank scientific writing reminiscent of classic works of natural history, with an impassioned plea for Earth’s future, Extinction gives a detailed picture of the enormous impact of humanity on the natural world.

"The Earth’s biodiversity is in serious jeopardy. In the last 50 years, wildlife populations have more than halved, and the rate of species extinction is now hundreds of times normal. Nearly 700 vertebrate species have gone extinct in the last 500 years, and these are just the ones we know about. All of this is a result of the unparalleled impact of humanity on the natural world, an impact that continues to grow.

"Acting as both a primer on evolution, extinction, and ecology and a summary of human environmental history, [this book by] T. Thomas Rathe puts the cost of human actions in the clearest terms by highlighting more than 50 species lost in the modern age ranging from birds and reptiles to fish, amphibians, and our mammal relatives.

"More than just a discussion of humans' negative impact, Extinction puts the reader in touch with some of the world's amazing creatures by detailing a number of the most fascinating members of the animal kingdom and ends with a serious look at what all of us can do to help stem species loss and make a better world for us and all of Earth’s life. With something for everyone and a must-read for animal lovers and those concerned about Earth’s (and humanity’s) future, Extinction makes clear the tenuous situation we are facing, but also shows that the future can be what we make it."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (3 ratings)
ISBN 979-8851185359 ?
A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety:
How to Keep Your Cool on a Warming Planet
Sarah Jaquette Ray
University of California Press; First edition (April 21, 2020)
No Review

"Gen Z's first 'existential toolkit' for combating eco-guilt and burnout while advocating for climate justice.

"A youth movement is reenergizing global environmental activism. The 'climate generation'—late millennials and iGen, or Generation Z—is demanding that policy makers and government leaders take immediate action to address the dire outcomes predicted by climate science. Those inheriting our planet’s environmental problems expect to encounter challenges, but they may not have the skills to grapple with the feelings of powerlessness and despair that may arise when they confront this seemingly intractable situation.

"Drawing on a decade of experience leading and teaching in college environmental studies programs, Sarah Jaquette Ray has created an 'existential tool kit' for the climate generation. Combining insights from psychology, sociology, social movements, mindfulness, and the environmental humanities, Ray explains why and how we need to let go of eco-guilt, resist burnout, and cultivate resilience while advocating for climate justice. A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety is the essential guidebook for the climate generation—and perhaps the rest of us—as we confront the greatest environmental threat of our time."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.1 (38 ratings)
ISBN 978-0520343306 ?
Denial:
A Novel
Jon Raymond
Simon & Schuster (July 26, 2022)
No Review

"The year is 2052. Climate change has had a predictably devastating effect: Venice submerged, cyclones in Oklahoma, megafires in South America. Yet it could be much worse. Two decades earlier, the global protest movement known as the Upheavals helped break the planet’s fossil fuel dependency, and the subsequent Nuremberg-like Toronto Trials convicted the most powerful oil executives and lobbyists for crimes against the environment. Not all of them. A few executives escaped arrest and went into hiding, including pipeline mastermind Robert Cave.

"Now, a Pacific Northwest journalist named Jack Henry who works for a struggling media company has received a tip that Cave is living in Mexico. Hoping the story will save his job, he travels south and, using a fake identity, makes contact with the fugitive. The two men strike up an unexpected friendship, leaving Jack torn about exposing Cave—an uncertainty further compounded by the diagnosis of a life-threatening illness and a new romance with an old acquaintance. Who will really benefit from the unmasking? What is the nature of justice and punishment? How does one contend with mortality when the planet itself is dying?

"Denial is both a page-turning speculative suspense novel and a powerful existential inquisition about the perilous moment in which we currently live."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (3 ratings)
ISBN 978-1982181833 ?
The Aviator
Gareth Renowden
Limestone Hills Publishing (September, 2012)
No Review

"Flying a hi-tech airship around a planet riven by climate change and economic collapse, our hero encounters the strange remnants of civilisation — the people searching for the singularity, the rocking bishop and his flying cathedral, the last climate sceptics, the deep green terrorists, the billionaire libertarians in their bubble, and much, much more. Not to mention the goats, the girlfriend with bots in her head and the elixir of life (which is cheese)."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (17 ratings)
ISBN 978-0987669735 ?
Second Nature:
Scenes from a World Remade
Nathaniel Rich
MCD (March 30, 2021)
No Review

"We live at a time in which scientists race to reanimate extinct beasts, our most essential ecosystems require monumental engineering projects to survive, chicken breasts grow in test tubes, and multinational corporations conspire to poison the blood of every living creature. No rock, leaf, or cubic foot of air on Earth has escaped humanity's clumsy signature. The old distinctions―between natural and artificial, dystopia and utopia, science fiction and science fact―have blurred, losing all meaning. We inhabit an uncanny landscape of our own creation.

"In Second Nature, ordinary people make desperate efforts to preserve their humanity in a world that seems increasingly alien. Their stories―obsessive, intimate, and deeply reported―point the way to a new kind of environmental literature, in which dramatic narrative helps us to understand our place in a reality that resembles nothing human beings have known.

From Odds Against Tomorrow to Losing Earth to the film Dark Waters (adapted from the first chapter of this book), Nathaniel Rich’s stories have come to define the way we think of contemporary ecological narrative. In Second Nature, he asks what it means to live in an era of terrible responsibility. The question is no longer, How do we return to the world that we’ve lost? It is, What world do we want to create in its place?"

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (8 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374106034 ?
Not the End of the World:
How We Can Be the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet
Hannah Ritchie
Little, Brown Spark (January 9, 2024)
No Review

"DR. Hannah Ritchie is Senior Researcher in the Programme for Global Development at the University of Oxford. She is also Deputy Editor and Lead Researcher at the highly influential online publication Our World in Data. In 2022, Ritchie was named Scotland’s Youth Climate Champion and New Scientist called her “The woman who gave COVID-19 data to the world."

"This 'eye-opening and essential' book (Bill Gates) will transform how you see our biggest environmental problems—and explains how we can solve them. It’s become common to tell kids that they’re going to die from climate change. We are constantly bombarded by doomsday headlines that tell us the soil won’t be able to support crops, fish will vanish from our oceans, and that we should reconsider having children. But in this bold, radically hopeful book, data scientist Hannah Ritchie argues that if we zoom out, a very different picture emerges. In fact, the data shows we’ve made so much progress on these problems that we could be on track to achieve true sustainability for the first time in human history. Did you know that:

  • Carbon emissions per capita are actually down
  • Deforestation peaked back in the 1980s
  • The air we breathe now is vastly improved from centuries ago
  • And more people died from natural disasters a hundred years ago?

"Packed with the latest research, practical guidance, and enlightening graphics, this book will make you rethink almost everything you’ve been told about the environment. Not the End of the World will give you the tools to understand our current crisis and make lifestyle changes that actually have an impact. Hannah cuts through the noise by outlining what works, what doesn’t, and what we urgently need to focus on so we can leave a sustainable planet for future generations.

"These problems are big. But they are solvable. We are not doomed. We can build a better future for everyone. Let’s turn that opportunity into reality."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (51 rating)
ISBN 978-0316536752 ?
New York 2140
Kim Stanley Robinson
Orbit (March 14, 2017)
No Review

"As the sea levels rose, every street became a canal. Every skyscraper an island. For the residents of one apartment building in Madison Square, however, New York in the year 2140 is far from a drowned city.

"There is the market trader, who finds opportunities where others find trouble. There is the detective, whose work will never disappear — along with the lawyers, of course.

"There is the internet star, beloved by millions for her airship adventures, and the building's manager, quietly respected for his attention to detail. Then there are two boys who don't live there, but have no other home -- and who are more important to its future than anyone might imagine.

"Lastly there are the coders, temporary residents on the roof, whose disappearance triggers a sequence of events that threatens the existence of all — and even the long-hidden foundations on which the city rests."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (549 ratings)
ISBN 978-0316262347 ?
The Ministry for the Future
Kim Stanley Robinson
Orbit (October 6, 2020)
No Review

"The Ministry for the Future is a masterpiece of the imagination, using fictional eyewitness accounts to tell the story of how climate change will affect us all. Its setting is not a desolate, postapocalyptic world, but a future that is almost upon us — and in which we might just overcome the extraordinary challenges we face.

"It is a novel both immediate and impactful, desperate and hopeful in equal measure, and it is one of the most powerful and original books on climate change ever written."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (96 ratings)
ISBN 978-0316300131 ?
Climate Justice:
Hope, Resilience, and the Fight for a Sustainable Future
Mary Robinson
Bloomsbury Publishing (September, 2018)
No Review

"Holding her first grandchild in her arms in 2003, Mary Robinson was struck by the uncertainty of the world he had been born into. Before his fiftieth birthday, he would share the planet with more than nine billion people--people battling for food, water, and shelter in an increasingly volatile climate. The faceless, shadowy menace of climate change had become, in an instant, deeply personal.

"Mary Robinson's mission would lead her all over the world, from Malawi to Mongolia, and to a heartening revelation: that an irrepressible driving force in the battle for climate justice could be found at the grassroots level, mainly among women, many of them mothers and grandmothers like herself. From Sharon Hanshaw, the Mississippi matriarch whose campaign began in her East Biloxi hair salon and culminated in her speaking at the United Nations, to Constance Okollet, a small farmer who transformed the fortunes of her ailing community in rural Uganda, Robinson met with ordinary people whose resilience and ingenuity had already unlocked extraordinary change.

"Powerful and deeply humane, Climate Justice is a stirring manifesto on one of the most pressing humanitarian issues of our time, and a lucid, affirmative, and well-argued case for hope."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.2 (31 ratings)
ISBN 978-1632869289 ?
Waking Up To Climate Change:
Five Dimensions Of The Crisis And What We Can Do About It
George H. Ropes
Dr. Cynthia Rosenzweig (Preface)
WSPC (November 24, 2022)
No Review
"After graduating from Dartmouth College, George Ropes joined the Peace Corps, serving in the Dominican Republic. He then taught in public and private schools in New York City before leaving to pursue his own advanced studies. At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he earned a master's degree in political science, with a concentration in International Nutrition Policy and Planning. He joined Catholic Relief Services (CRS), a non-profit aid and development organization. As a CRS program leader and specialist in the area of food distribution, he lived and worked in Egypt, India, and Angola, and then globe-hopped as Chief of the CRS Overseas Computerization Program. In 2008, he co-founded ClimateYou.org, a multidisciplinary forum designed to connect climate researchers, writers, students, and the general public. The site's initial and continuing goal: to help people share news of developments as the world wakes up to climate change and moves forward to solve its multi-dimensional challenges."

"For 15 years, author George Ropes has followed the unfolding story of climate change for the timely website ClimateYou.org. Along the way, he has covered myriad individual research studies, innovations, catastrophes, and signs of progress, from the resurgence of sustainable communities to lessons learned from the Australian wildfires. This enlightening book presents a selection of these key writings to describe the multifaceted ways that climate change affects Energy; Weather and climate; People and nature; Laws and leaders; and Finance. Looking at these five dimensions of the crisis, Waking Up to Climate Change illuminates how we all can play a crucial part in our beautiful planet's health and survival."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (6 ratings)
ISBN 978-9811246234 ?
The Nature of Nature:
Why We Need the Wild
Enric Sala
National Geographic (August 25, 2020)
No Review
"Enric Sala is a marine ecologist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence dedicated to restoring the health and productivity of the ocean. He is widely recognized for his worldwide conservation efforts, based on solid observational and experimental research, combined with strategic communications and policy discussions. Previously a professor at the prestigious Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California, he founded National Geographic Pristine Seas, a global project that combines exploration, research, and storytelling to inspire leaders and communities to protect the last wild places in the ocean. To date, Pristine Seas has helped to create 22 marine reserves encompassing almost 6 million square kilometers of ocean, more than half the area of all 50 United States."

"In this spirited memoir, world-renowned conservationist Enric Sala weaves fascinating tales of the natural world, revealing how connections in nature promise a thriving economy as well as a healthy planet.

"Enric Sala wants to change the world—and in this compelling book, he shows us how. Once we appreciate how nature works, he asserts, we will understand why conservation is economically wise and essential to our survival. Here Sala, director of National Geographic's Pristine Seas project (which has succeeded in protecting more than 5 million sq km of ocean), tells the story of his scientific awakening and his transition from academia to activism--as he puts it, he was tired of writing the obituary of the ocean. His revelations are surprising, sometimes counterintuitive: More sharks signal a healthier ocean; crop diversity, not intensive monoculture farming, is the key to feeding the planet. Using fascinating examples from his expeditions and those of other scientists, Sala shows the economic wisdom of making room for nature, even as the population becomes more urbanized. In a sober epilogue, he shows how saving nature can save us all, by reversing conditions that led to the coronavirus pandemic and preventing other global catastrophes. With a foreword from Prince Charles and an introduction from E. O. Wilson, this powerful book will change the way you think about our world—and our future."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (327 ratings)
ISBN 978-1426221019 ?
Inconspicuous Consumption:
The Environmental Impact You Don't Know You Have
Tatiana Schlossberg
Grand Central Publishing (August 27, 2019)
No Review

"With urgency and wit, Tatiana Schlossberg explains that far from being only a distant problem of the natural world created by the fossil fuel industry, climate change is all around us, all the time, lurking everywhere in our convenience-driven society, all without our realizing it. By examining the unseen and unconscious environmental impacts in four areas—the Internet and technology, food, fashion, and fuel—Schlossberg helps readers better understand why climate change is such a complicated issue, and how it connects all of us: How streaming a movie on Netflix in New York burns coal in Virginia; how eating a hamburger in California might contribute to pollution in the Gulf of Mexico; how buying an inexpensive cashmere sweater in Chicago expands the Mongolian desert; how destroying forests from North Carolina is necessary to generate electricity in England.

"Cataloging the complexities and frustrations of our carbon-intensive society with a dry sense of humor, Schlossberg makes the climate crisis and its solutions interesting and relevant to everyone who cares, even a little, about the planet. She empowers readers to think about their stuff and the environment in a new way, helping them make more informed choices when it comes to the future of our world.

"Most importantly, this is a book about the power we have as voters and consumers to make sure that the fight against climate change includes all of us and all of our stuff, not just industry groups and politicians. If we have any hope of solving the problem, we all have to do it together."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.7 (27 ratings)
ISBN 978-1538747087 ?
Science Denial:
Why It Happens and What to Do About It
Gale Sinatra & Barbara Hofer
Oxford University Press (July 7, 2021)
No Review

"How do individuals decide whether to accept human causes of climate change, vaccinate their children against childhood diseases, or practice social distancing during a pandemic? Democracies depend on educated citizens who can make informed decisions for the benefit of their health and well-being, as well as their communities, nations, and planet. Understanding key psychological explanations for science denial and doubt can help provide a means for improving scientific literacy and understanding―critically important at a time when denial has become deadly. In Science Denial: Why It Happens and What to Do About It, the authors identify the problem and why it matters and offer tools for addressing it. This book explains both the importance of science education and its limitations, shows how science communicators may inadvertently contribute to the problem, and explains how the internet and social media foster misinformation and disinformation. The authors focus on key psychological constructs such as reasoning biases, social identity, epistemic cognition, and emotions and attitudes that limit or facilitate public understanding of science, and describe solutions for individuals, educators, science communicators, and policy makers. If you have ever wondered why science denial exists, want to know how to understand your own biases and those of others, and would like to address the problem, this book will provide the insights you are seeking."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.6 (43 ratings)
ISBN 978-0190944681 ?
Orleans:
A Novel
Sherri L. Smith
G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers (March, 2013) | Age Range: 12 & up | Grades: 7 - 9 | Lexile Measure: 750L
No Review

"As the waters receded, New Orleans picked itself up by its bootstraps and flipped Hurricane Katrina a rude finger gesture as she tucked tail and ran. But what would happen if Katrina was only the first in a long line of increasingly more severe storms? Could our beloved N'Orleans and the surrounding delta survive? In Sherri L. Smith's Orleans, we get a terrifying glimpse of a world that we pray doesn't resemble our future.

"Fen survives in the Delta like everyone else. They have no choice. After hurricane after worsening hurricane battered the area into total submission, Delta Fever took over. Delta Fever was unstoppable and the rest of the country had no choice. They built the wall. They separated themselves from the Delta region, and left it to fend for itself. Now, decades later, inside the wall is assumed to be a wasteland with few survivors. Daniel wants to find a cure to Delta Fever, but his closest attempt only made the virus worse. Instead of giving up, he heads to Orleans to gather data that is unavailable outside the wall.

"Once inside, though, he is shocked to find a thriving, albeit bloodthirsty, way of life. Fen, a teenaged O-Pos girl, lives that life well. Everyone survives better in a tribe, but when her tribe is brutally murdered and she is left with an infant from the tribe's leader, she can only think of taking care of Baby. Although Daniel is a liability, he also helped her and Baby escape the Blood Farm, so she owes him. While she doesn't think she can give him [what] he is looking for, especially in the lawless city of Orleans, she can certainly guide him there. But there is a lot more waiting for innocent, unsuspecting kids than just Delta Fever. Orleans is full of shadows.

"This was a really interesting post-apocalyptic story. It was terrifying to see how quickly the region spiraled downwards, and how the rest of the country was totally willing to quarantine the area with Delta Fever unrelenting and incurable. I have family who lived through Hurricane Sandy in New Jersey, and it was until I saw the actual destruction a hurricane can cause, I didn't truly understand what a city like New Orleans has lived through. Sandy may have caused a lot of monetary damage that crippled a lot of people, but Katrina crippled a culture. Although they bounced back, as is the nature of those fierce Cajuns, Katrina will always be a part of their culture now, for better or for worse. The idea of shutting out a whole part of the country and calling it quits was terrifying, but how far would we really go if we couldn't control a deadly virus?" – a customer reviewer

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.0 (68 ratings)
ISBN 978-0399252945 ?
Not Too Late:
Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility
Rebecca Solnit & Thelma Young Lutunatabua (Editors)
David Solnit (Illustrator)
Haymarket Books (April 4, 2023)
No Review
Rebecca Solnit is the author of more than twenty books, including Orwell’s Roses; Hope in the Dark; Men Explain Things to Me; A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that Arise in Disaster; and A Field Guide to Getting Lost. A longtime climate and human rights activist, she serves on the board of the climate group Oil Change International and the advisory boards of Dayenu and Third Act. Thelma Young Lutunatabua is a digital storyteller and activist. She is the co-founder of Not Too Late. 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 endeavors around the world. She calls Fiji and Texas home. David Solnit (brother of Rebecca Solnit) is an arts organizer, puppeteer, artist, and carpenter." – Amazon biography

"Not Too Late brings strong climate voices from around the world to address the political, scientific, social, and emotional dimensions of the most urgent issue human beings have ever faced. Accessible, encouraging, and engaging, it's an invitation to everyone to understand the issue more deeply, participate more boldly, and imagine the future more creatively.

"In concise, illuminating essays and interviews, Not Too Late features the voices of Indigenous activists, such as Guam-based attorney and writer Julian Aguon; climate scientists, among them Jacquelyn Gill and Edward Carr; artists, such as Marshall Islands poet and activist Kathy Jeñtil-Kijiner; and longtime organizers, including The Tyranny of Oil author Antonia Juhasz and Emergent Strategy author adrienne maree brown.

"Shaped by the clear-eyed wisdom of editors Rebecca Solnit and Thelma Young Lutunatabua, and enhanced by illustrations by David Solnit, Not Too Late is a guide to take us from climate crisis to climate hope.

"Contributors include Julian Aguon, Jade Begay, adrienne maree brown, Edward Carr, Renato Redantor Constantino, Joelle Gergis, Jacquelyn Gill, Mary Annaise Heglar, Mary Anne Hitt, Roshi Joan Halifax, Nikayla Jefferson, Antonia Juhasz, Kathy Jetnil Kijiner, Fenton Lutunatabua & Joseph `Sikulu, Yotam Marom, Denali Nalamalapu, Leah Stokes, Farhana Sultana, and Gloria Walton."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.1 (40 ratings)
ISBN 978-1642599442 ?
Termination Shock:
A Novel
Neal Stephenson
William Morrow (November 16, 2021)
No Review

"Neal Town Stephenson (born October 31, 1959) is an American writer, known for his speculative fiction works, which have been variously categorized science fiction, historical fiction, maximalism, cyberpunk, and postcyberpunk. Stephenson explores areas such as mathematics, cryptography, philosophy, currency, and the history of science. He also writes non-fiction articles about technology in publications such as Wired Magazine, and has worked part-time as an advisor for Blue Origin, a company (funded by Jeff Bezos) developing a manned sub-orbital launch system.

"Born in Fort Meade, Maryland (home of the NSA and the National Cryptologic Museum) Stephenson came from a family comprising engineers and hard scientists he dubs 'propeller heads.' His father is a professor of electrical engineering whose father was a physics professor; his mother worked in a biochemistry laboratory, while her father was a biochemistry professor. Stephenson's family moved to Champaign-Urbana, Illinois in 1960 and then to Ames, Iowa in 1966 where he graduated from Ames High School in 1977. Stephenson furthered his studies at Boston University. He first specialized in physics, then switched to geography after he found that it would allow him to spend more time on the university mainframe. He graduated in 1981 with a B.A. in Geography and a minor in physics. Since 1984, Stephenson has lived mostly in the Pacific Northwest and currently resides in Seattle with his family.

"Neal Stephenson is the author of the three-volume historical epic The Baroque Cycle (Quicksilver, The Confusion, and The System of the World) and the novels Cryptonomicon, The Diamond Age, Snow Crash, and Zodiac. He lives in Seattle, Washington." – Amazon biography

From Neal Stephenson—who coined the term 'metaverse' in his 1992 novel Snow Crash—comes a sweeping, prescient new thriller that transports readers to a near-future world in which the greenhouse effect has inexorably resulted in a whirling-dervish troposphere of superstorms, rising sea levels, global flooding, merciless heat waves, and virulent, deadly pandemics.

"One man—visionary billionaire restaurant chain magnate T. R. Schmidt, Ph.D.—has a Big Idea for reversing global warming, a master plan perhaps best described as 'elemental.' But will it work? And just as important, what are the consequences for the planet and all of humanity should it be applied?

"Ranging from the Texas heartland to the Dutch royal palace in the Hague, from the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas to the sunbaked Chihuahuan Desert, Termination Shock brings together a disparate group of characters from different cultures and continents who grapple with the real-life repercussions of global warming. Ultimately, it asks the question: Might the cure be worse than the disease?

"Epic in scope while heartbreakingly human in perspective, Termination Shock sounds a clarion alarm, ponders potential solutions and dire risks, and wraps it all together in an exhilarating, witty, mind-expanding speculative adventure"

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.4 (6,590 ratings)
ISBN 978-0063028050 ?
What We Think About When We Try Not To Think about Global Warming:
Toward a New Psychology of Climate Action
Per Espen Stoknes
Jorgen Randers (Fwd.)
Chelsea Green Publishing (April, 2015)
No Review

"In What We Think About When We Try Not To Think About Global Warming, Stoknes not only masterfully identifies the five main psychological barriers to climate action, but addresses them with five strategies for how to talk about global warming in a way that creates action and solutions, not further inaction and despair."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (34 ratings)
ISBN 978-1-60358-583-5 SJ6 BF353.5.C55S76 2015
The Last Resort:
A Chronicle of Paradise, Profit, and Peril at the Beach
Sarah Stodola
Ecco (June 28, 2022)
No Review

"With its promise of escape from the strains of everyday life, the beach has a hold on the popular imagination as the ultimate paradise. In The Last Resort, Sarah Stodola dives into the psyche of the beachgoer and gets to the heart of what drives humans to seek out the sand. At the same time, she grapples with the darker realities of resort culture: strangleholds on local economies, reckless construction, erosion of beaches, weighty carbon footprints, and the inevitable overdevelopment and decline that comes with a soaring demand for popular shorelines.

"The Last Resort weaves Stodola’s firsthand travel notes with her exacting journalism in an enthralling report on the past, present, and future of coastal travel. She takes us from Monte Carlo, where the pursuit of pleasure first became part of the beach resort experience, to a village in Fiji that was changed irrevocably by the opening of a single resort; from the overdevelopment that stripped Acapulco of its reputation for exclusivity to Miami Beach, where extreme measures are underway to prevent the barrier island from vanishing into the ocean.

"In the twenty-first century, beach travel has become central to our globalized world—its culture, economy, and interconnectedness. But with sea levels likely to rise at least 1.5 to 3 feet by the end of this century, beaches will become increasingly difficult to preserve, and many will disappear altogether. What will our last resort be when water begins to fill the lobbies?"

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.7 (32 ratings)
ISBN 978-0062951625 ?
Back to Earth:
What Life in Space Taught Me About Our Home Planet―And Our Mission to Protect It
Nicole Stott
Seal Press; Standard Edition (October 12, 2021)
No Review
Nicole Stott is an astronaut, aquanaut, and an artist who spent over one hundred days in space aboard the International Space Station. After a twenty-eight year career with NASA, she founded the Space for Art Foundation, and she speaks to audiences around the world including the Vatican and the United Nations' historic Paris Agreement gathering. She is featured in National Geographic's One Strange Rock. Nicole lives in Florida with her family." – Amazon biography

"When Nicole Stott first saw Earth from space, she realized how interconnected we are and knew she had to help protect our planetary home.

"In Back to Earth, Stott imparts essential lessons in problem-solving, survival, and crisis response that each of us can practice to make change. She knows we can overcome differences to address global issues, because she saw this every day on the International Space Station. Stott shares stories from her spaceflight and insights from scientists, activists, and changemakers working to solve our greatest environmental challenges. She learns about the complexities of Earth’s biodiversity from NASA engineers working to enable life in space and from scientists protecting life on Earth for future generations. Ultimately, Stott reveals how we each have the power to respect our planetary home and one another by living our lives like crewmates, not passengers, on an inspiring shared mission.

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (50 ratings)
ISBN 978-1541675049 ?
Annihilation:
A Novel (The Southern Reach Trilogy)
Jeff VanderMeer
Fourth Estate (February, 2014)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.6 (866 ratings)
ISBN 978-0007550715 ?
Authority:
A Novel (The Southern Reach Trilogy)
Jeff VanderMeer
FSG Originals (May, 2014)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.8 (275 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374104108 ?
Acceptance:
A Novel (The Southern Reach Trilogy)
Jeff VanderMeer
FSG Originals (September, 2014)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.5 (235 ratings)
ISBN 978-0374104115 ?
The Memory We Could Be:
Overcoming Fear to Create Our Ecological Future
Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik
New Society Publishers (September 25, 2018)
No Review

"The Memory We Could Be moves beyond the sterile, technical language around climate change and ecology to humanize the abstraction of global warming and bring different voices into the conversation.

"Drawing on sources from anthropology to hydrology, botany to economics, agronomy to astrobiology, medicine to oceanography, physics to history, the author weaves a lyrical and powerful story of our relationship with nature."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN: 978-0865718999 ?
Life as We Know It (Can Be):
Stories of People, Climate, and Hope in a Changing World
Bill Weir
Chronicle Prism (April 16, 2024)
No Review
"Bill Weir is an Emmy Award-winning television journalist who has reported from all fifty states and over fifty countries on every continent. After covering sports in Green Bay, Chicago, and Los Angeles early in his career, he spent a decade as co-anchor of Good Morning America and Nightline at ABC before moving to CNN in 2013. After writing and hosting four seasons of The Wonder List with Bill Weir, he was named the first Chief Climate Correspondent in network news in 2019."

"Award-winning journalist and CNN chief climate correspondent Bill Weir draws on his years of immersive travel and reporting to share the best ideas and stories of hope and positivity from the people and communities around the world who are thriving in the wake of climate change, and what we can learn from them to build a more promising future.

"While reporting from every state and every continent, and filming his acclaimed CNN Original Series The Wonder List, Bill Weir has spent decades telling the stories of unique people, places, cultures, and creatures on the brink of change. As the first Chief Climate Correspondent in network news, he’s immersed in the latest science and breakthroughs on the topic, while often on the frontlines of disasters, natural and manmade.

"In 2020, Bill began distilling these experiences into a series of Earth Day letters for his then-newborn son to read in 2050, to help him better understand the world he will have grown up in and be better prepared to embrace the future. Bill’s work and his letters were the inspiration for Life As We Know It (Can Be), which confronts the worry and wonder of climate change with messages and examples of hope for all of us on how a better future can still be written.

"Highlighting groundbreaking innovation in fields of clean energy, food and water sources, housing and building materials, and more, and touching on how happiness, resilience, and health and wellness factor into the topic of climate change, Bill’s stories take readers on a global journey, from one community in Florida that took on a hurricane and never lost power, to the Antarctic Peninsula where one species of penguin is showing us the key to survival, to the nuclear fusion labs where scientists are trying to build a star in a box. In these pages, we join a search for ancient wisdom and new ideas.

"Life As We Know It (Can Be) is a celebration of the wonders of our planet, a meditation on the human wants and needs that drive it out of balance, and an inspiration for communities to galvanize around nature and each other as the very best way to best prepare and plan for what’s next."

Rating by Amazon customers: 5.0 (13 ratings)
ISBN 978-1797213613 ?
A Change in the Weather
Raymond Welch
Ice Cap Publishing (January, 2013)
No Review

"A Change in the Weather follows the Russell family during the tenth anniversary of the disappearance of the polar ice cap, from March 2028 through May 2029. The Arctic has inverted from heat reflector to heat sink, and the jet stream has broken from its age-old trajectory to whip the globe like an unattended fire hose. Rainfall patterns shift seasons, location, and intensity the world over. Agriculture fails. The international economy collapses. Terrorism surges." – publisher

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.3 (7 ratings)
ISBN 978-0615734095 ?
Climate Change and Social Ecology:
A New Perspective on the Climate Challenge
Stephen M. Wheeler
Routledge (May, 2012)
No Review

Eh?

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-0415809870 ?
Between God and Green:
How Evangelicals Are Cultivating a Middle Ground on Climate Change
Katharine K. Wilkinson
Oxford University Press (June 25, 2012)
No Review

"Despite three decades of scientists' warnings and environmentalists' best efforts, the political will and public engagement necessary to fuel robust action on global climate change remain in short supply. Katharine K. Wilkinson shows that, contrary to popular expectations, faith-based efforts are emerging and strengthening to address this problem. In the US, perhaps none is more significant than evangelical climate care.

"Drawing on extensive focus group and textual research and interviews, Between God & Green explores the phenomenon of climate care, from its historical roots and theological grounding to its visionary leaders and advocacy initiatives. Wilkinson examines the movement's reception within the broader evangelical community, from pew to pulpit. She shows that by engaging with climate change as a matter of private faith and public life, leaders of the movement challenge traditional boundaries of the evangelical agenda, partisan politics, and established alliances and hostilities. These leaders view sea-level rise as a moral calamity, lobby for legislation written on both sides of the aisle, and partner with atheist scientists.

"Wilkinson reveals how evangelical environmentalists are reshaping not only the landscape of American climate action, but the contours of their own religious community. Though the movement faces complex challenges, climate care leaders continue to leverage evangelicalism's size, dominance, cultural position, ethical resources, and mechanisms of communication to further their cause to bridge God and green."

Rating by Amazon customers: 3.7 (7 ratings)
ISBN 978-0199895885 ?
Hope and Courage in the Climate Crisis:
Wisdom and Action in the Long Emergency
John Wiseman
Palgrave Macmillan (August 7, 2021)
No Review

"As the risks of the climate crisis continue to grow, so too do the challenges of facing a harsh climate future with honesty and courage; justice and compassion; meaning and purpose.

"Hope and Courage in the Climate Crisis explores diverse sources of learning and wisdom –from climate scientists and activists; philosophers and social theorists; Indigenous cultures and ways of life; faith based and spiritual traditions; artists and writers—which can help us live courageous, compassionate and creative lives in a world of rapidly accelerating climatic and ecological risk.

"Accelerating the transition to a just and resilient zero-carbon society will require visionary leadership and courageous collective action. Awareness that rapid action might still be insufficient to prevent severe and irreversible social and ecological damage is however a source of deep concern for many people passionately committed to decisive climate action.

"Drawing on broad experience as a climate activist, researcher and policy maker John Wiseman provides a wide ranging, accessible and provocative guided tour of ideas which can inspire and sustain radical hope and defiant courage in the long emergency which now lies before us."

Rating by Amazon customers: ? (0 ratings)
ISBN 978-3030707422 ?
Miseducation:
How Climate Change Is Taught in America
Katie Worth
Columbia Global Reports (November 16, 2021)
No Review
"Katie Worth is an Emmy and Edward R. Murrow Award-winning investigative journalist. From 2015 to 2021, she worked for the PBS series FRONTLINE on enterprise investigations and multimedia stories about science and politics. Her work has appeared in Scientific American, National Geographic, Slate, The Wall Street Journal, and was included in The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2016."

"Investigative reporter Katie Worth reviewed scores of textbooks, built a 50-state database, and traveled to a dozen communities to talk to children and teachers about what is being taught, and found a red-blue divide in climate education. More than one-third of young adults believe that climate change is not man-made, and science instructors are being contradicted by history teachers who tell children not to worry about it.

"Who has tried to influence what children learn, and how successful have they been? Worth connects the dots on oil corporations, state legislatures, school boards, libertarian thinktanks, conservative lobbyists, and textbook publishers, all of whom have learned from the fight over evolution and tobacco, and are now sowing uncertainty, confusion, and distrust about climate science, with the result that four in five Americans today don’t think there is a scientific consensus on global warming. In the words of a top climate educator, 'We are the only country in the world that has had a multi-decade, multi-billion dollar deny-delay-confuse campaign.' Miseducation is the alarming story of how climate denialism was implanted in millions of school children."

Rating by Amazon customers: 4.7 (38 ratings)
ISBN 978-1735913643 ?
Deluge:
A Novel of Global Warming
S. Fowler Wright
Wildside Press Kindle Edition (February, 2012) — 1624 KB, 347pp.
No Review

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Rating by Amazon customers: 3.0 (1 review)
ASIN: B007BZDU5O ?
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