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Power to Save the World: The Truth About Nuclear Energy Paperback – Illustrated, October 14, 2008

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 219 ratings

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An informed look at the myths and fears surrounding nuclear energy, and a practical, politically realistic solution to global warming and our energy needs. Faced by the world's oil shortages and curious about alternative energy sources, Gwyneth Cravens skeptically sets out to find the truth about nuclear energy. Her conclusion: it is a totally viable and practical solution to global warming. In the end, we see that if we are to care for subsequent generations, embracing nuclear energy is an ethical imperative.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Let's hope this clear-eyed, up-to-date tour of all things nuclear. . . . Sparks a renewed nationwide debate.”
Wired

“Provocative. . . . A fresh look at nuclear power [that asks] whether the threat of global warming has changed the calculus of nuclear risk.”
The Washington Post Book World

“Illuminating. . . . A picaresque, flat-out love song to the bad boy of the great American energy debate.”
The Wall Street Journal

“Engaging and unusual.”
Foreign Affairs

About the Author

Gwyneth Cravens has written about science and public health for The New York Times, Harper's, and The Washington Post. She was an editor at The New Yorker and at Harper's, and has published three novels: The Black Death, Heart's Desire, and Love and Work. This is her first work of nonfiction.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group; Reprint edition (October 14, 2008)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 439 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0307385876
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0307385871
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8 x 5.2 x 1 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 219 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
219 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book extremely informative, thorough, and passionate about nuclear energy. They also say the writing style is well-written, literary, and nice to deal with. Readers describe the difficulty level as fascinating and factual. They mention the book is extremely safe and ready to deploy.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

32 customers mention "Content"32 positive0 negative

Customers find the book extremely informative, with clear and lucid explanations. They also appreciate the meticulous research and coverage of every base with history, data, and facts. Readers also say the book has a personal touch and shows how nuclear power is far safer and more beneficial than any other form of power.

"...With clear and lucid explanations, she ties together the work of Madam Curie, the significance of the U-235 isotope of uranium, and the boom-and-..." Read more

"...nothing artificial or theoretical about this, it is a genuine search for facts and knowledge...." Read more

"...-person approach to the subjects Gwyneth writes about, gives this book a personal touch, the reader gets involved as if it were a novel...." Read more

"...case for nuclear energy, presenting the reader with an abundance of factual information, not the usual "China Syndrome" drivel you witness daily in..." Read more

17 customers mention "Writing style"17 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well written, informative, and easy to understand. They also say the author makes the writing personal and believable. Customers also say that the book is accessible, involving, and interesting.

"...It makes her writing personal and believable...." Read more

"...Gwyneth's book is accessible, involving and interesting enough to everyone...." Read more

"...The book makes the technical aspects accessible for the layman, although as a physicist I found it a little lax on technical details..." Read more

"...It is a bonus that the book is so well written, and has literary value in the way it shows a firmly-held opinion slowly changing to its opposite as..." Read more

9 customers mention "Difficulty level"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book fascinating, factual, and involving. They also appreciate the detailed, dispassionate, first-hand account.

"...It makes her writing personal and believable...." Read more

"...Gwyneth's book is accessible, involving and interesting enough to everyone...." Read more

"This book was fascinating and factual...." Read more

"...She provides a thorough and compelling narrative of her journey from uninformed anti-nuclear energy activist to well informed pro-nuclear energy..." Read more

5 customers mention "Safety"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book extremely safe and ready to deploy.

"...spite of that, the most modern reactors are ready to deploy, are extremely safe, and convert existing stockpiles of "nuclear waste" into fuel,..." Read more

"...is sound, it's the best/only climate solution available TODAY, it's safe, its cost effective, it's our bridge to a green world, the waste is only a..." Read more

"...It shows how it’s far safer and more beneficial than any other form of power generation all backed by facts and research." Read more

"...that nuclear power is by no means without risk but that the risks are worth the gain given proper care." Read more

4 customers mention "Beauty"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book beautiful, with clarity, optimism, and an excellent job of presenting the case for nuclear energy.

"...on the benefits and risks of nuclear technology, the style which I find quite refreshing. The book is divided into six chapters, called: 1...." Read more

"This book was fascinating and factual. I felt it did an excellent job of presenting the case for nuclear energy, presenting the reader with an..." Read more

"...Cravens has written a thourougly researched, factual, cogent, no holds barred look at the issue of energy crisis facing this country and the world...." Read more

"Radiates with clarity, optimism, and beauty..." Read more

4 customers mention "Consistency"4 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's consistency, saying that Ms. Cravens demonstrates the book has an inherent reliability.

"...either you don't want to hear that nuclear power is clean, safe, and reliable, or you don't like the writing style...." Read more

"...Throughout the entire work Ms. Cravens demonstrates the inherent reliability, economy, and relative safety of properly designed nuclear energy...." Read more

"Good condition" Read more

"Strong book..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2015
Last March I was fortunate to be able to attend the “Einstein gala” which is the main fundraising event of the National Museum of Nuclear Science and History, here in Albuquerque, as a guest of the former Board Chair. Each year at the gala, they present the National award to a prominent individual or organization who has had an impact on nuclear issues. After attending the event in 2012, I decided to read the recent book of the award winner, Dr. Lisa Randall  Knocking on Heaven's Door: How Physics and Scientific Thinking Illuminate the Universe and the Modern World . Likewise, in 2015, I decided to read the book of the award winner, Gwyneth Cravens, a commitment I managed to fulfill in less than a year.

During her acceptance speech, she spoke of her childhood in Albuquerque, playing in the arroyos in the desert, quite possibly where my house is now located. She also introduced Dr. Rip Anderson, who initially challenged her to reexamine her anti-nuclear bias, and was her guide around the nuclear world, and a rational “touchstone” by refuting many of the arguments, often ill-founded, that inhibit our development of a resource that is our best option for “saving the world.”

The author commences with an epigram from Richard Rhodes, the author of (The Making of the Atomic Bomb) who in turn quotes Niels Bohr on the relentless goal of science being the “removal of prejudices.” In her text, in passing almost, she also quotes an equally apt passage from George Eliot’s 
Middlemarch (Penguin Classics) : “Everyone liked better to conjecture how the thing was, than simply to know it; for conjecture soon became more confident than knowledge, and had a more liberal allowance for the incompatible.”

In addition to “the brains” of the Manhattan Project being in Los Alamos, NM, and the first atomic bomb being detonated at Trinity site, near Alamogordo, NM, the state was the source of substantial amounts of uranium. The first stop on her “nuclear tour” was Ambrosia Lake, west of Mt. Taylor. With clear and lucid explanations, she ties together the work of Madam Curie, the significance of the U-235 isotope of uranium, and the boom-and-bust cycle of uranium mining, with Navajo Indians playing a prominent role.

With the help of Dr. Anderson, and with a considerable amount of hassles in the “post 9/11 era”, she would manage to tour the Idaho site, where nuclear reactors were deliberately put to extreme tests, and “melted down” on occasion. One of the meaningful comparisons she was able to make was a tour of two Duke Power plants in the Carolinas, one nuclear, the other coal fired. She toured Three Mile Island, the site of the most famous nuclear mishap in the United States, and relieved my brain of some of the useless misconceptions I still carried about it. Vicariously, via Dr. Fred A. Mettler, Chair of the Radiology Department of the Univ. of New Mexico, she would “tour” the worst disaster in the history of nuclear power: Chernobyl. He was a major investigator of this event. She also toured WIPP, the operating nuclear waste depository in southeastern NM, as well as the non-operational money sink hole of Yucca Mountain in Nevada.

Cravens provided numerous “takeaways.” These include the fact that “risk” in the nuclear field is still being measured by the “linear non-threshold hypothesis” (LNT). An apt comparison can be to having one’s hand being burned in 212 degree F. water. Using LNT, if a million people placed their hands in 36 degree F. water, 500 would receive third-degree burns. In essence, small amounts of radiation are still considered dangerous, and are not related to the amount of radiation people receive naturally. For example, as Cravens points out, people will double the amount of background radiation by simply moving from Long Island, in New York to Albuquerque, because those living at higher altitudes receive more background radiation. She also relates a meeting of the Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce, in which the assessment was: isn’t the massive amount of safety redundancies in the nuclear field a waste of money compared to anything else we do, for example, the operation of coal-fired plants that spew far greater amounts of toxins into the environment?

To some degree Cravens addresses the problem, but I feel it needs a much more thorough review, because it remains the “essential problem.” For example, she cites how additional radiation was detected by Duke Power, on workers coming from a site in Ohio, which, admittedly had a reputation as being poorly run. The response from the Ohio site: denial and defensiveness. Radiation IS an issue of which the public is poorly informed, and the images of Hiroshima and Chernobyl dominate. She speaks of tough regulators overseeing, and the honest and integrity of the workers in the nuclear field, of which, I am sure there are some, but what also dominates the public perceptions are the continued lies and inactions and cover-ups in widely disparate governmental (and yes, corporate!) areas from FEMA and Katrina, to the SEC and Bernie Madoff, through the Veterans Administration and HHS implementation of the ACA, Worldcom, Enron, and the latest outbreak of killing substances in the food industry, et al. And what can be done about putting the public’s mind at ease about that?

Overall though, despite some justified reservations, Cravens did convince me that a vigorous program to adopt nuclear power in the United States, as France has long done, is not merely an option that is 20% better, but rather an entire magnitude better. 5-stars for an essential read.
16 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2012
This book stands out because it tells of one woman's search for hard facts about nuclear energy, and the risks and opportunities it portends for powering the modern world. Gwyneth Cravens eschews the polemic for or against nuclear power, opting instead to trace her personal journey from a childhood worry about all things nuclear, to curious adult skeptic, to now informed supporter.

Growing up in Albuquerque, New Mexico, she lived with the fear (conveyed by the kids in nearby Los Alamos) that her town was the Soviet Union's number one target for an atomic bomb in the Western Hemisphere. Fortunately, her later job as a journalist and author led her into dialogue with a distinguished nuclear scientist, Dr. Rip Anderson, and so began her journey of the mind to discover all she could about nuclear energy. But this was to be no desk-top exercise. In company with Dr. Anderson, she visited real people doing real work in many nuclear installations across America, from salt caverns to uranium mines, experimental and working nuclear power plants, nuclear submarines, waste processing plants and a working nuclear waste repository. There is nothing artificial or theoretical about this, it is a genuine search for facts and knowledge. It makes her writing personal and believable.

A feature of the book is the way the author explores in depth subjects not often explained in popular writings about matters nuclear, e.g. radiation, and its prevalence in our daily lives ; probablistic risk assessment, and how this should be used to separate fact from urban myth ; the inner workings of a nuclear reactor ; and what it is like inside the world's only working Waste Isolation Pilot Plant deep under the New Mexico desert. There is an extensive glossary of terms for the uninitiated. She concludes with some gentle observations about her own change of heart, and the importance of gaining an accurate understanding of what nature and science have made available to humankind in the form of nuclear energy.

All in all a good read on a human scale, for both the technically-minded and and those simply wanting to be better informed on such an important subject.
4 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Christof Merkli
5.0 out of 5 stars Das beste Buch für die Beantwortung von Fragen zum Thema Atomkraft und Radioaktivität
Reviewed in Germany on December 29, 2022
Die Rezensionen haben nicht zu viel versprochen. Inhaltlich eine Perle im literarischen Sumpf der Atomkraftliteratur und ganz offensichtlich um Faktoren professioneller als der umfassende Propagandamüll der Atomkraftgegner aus dem Lager der Grünen.
One person found this helpful
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Bob
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent information about nuclear reactors utilized for power generation
Reviewed in Canada on September 8, 2020
This book is full of very technical information about the nuclear industry, and even though it was written more than a decade ago, it's still very helpful for one's understanding of the risks and rewards of nuclear power generation. It was recommended reading, before undertaking a course at Elder College (Vancouver Island University), and it has really changed my opinion about nuclear energy, in regards to the "Green Revolution" and the transition to nuclear, from fossil fuel generation of electricity.
BookBeetle
4.0 out of 5 stars Saving the world makes sense with this book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 13, 2015
Not an easy, but a very important, book to read. It gives us hope for the ways in which future needs can be met, safely and sensibly.
I would encourage anyone who cares about our 'blue marble' this beautiful world we live in, to read it and reflect on their own response, and what they too would do to support the ideas.
2 people found this helpful
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Dave Shannon
5.0 out of 5 stars Everyone concerned about climate change should read this book
Reviewed in Canada on June 24, 2020
Not written in an overly technical language, easy to follow, and a most important topic if we're serious climate change and about reducing CO2 in the atmosphere. I highly recommend this book, to be followed by Hargrave's 'Thorium Energy Cheaper Than Coal'.
Cec
5.0 out of 5 stars Truely a great read to clear up the myths about nuclear energy
Reviewed in Canada on October 18, 2014
Truely a great read to clear up the myths about nuclear energy. It's a must read for environmentalists and anti nuclear protesters.