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The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming Hardcover – February 19, 2019

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 3,657 ratings

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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “The Uninhabitable Earth hits you like a comet, with an overflow of insanely lyrical prose about our pending Armageddon.”—Andrew Solomon, author of The Noonday Demon

NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY The New Yorker  The New York Times Book Review • Time • NPR • The Economist The Paris Review • Toronto Star  • GQ • The Times Literary Supplement • The New York Public Library • Kirkus Reviews

It is worse, much worse, than you think. If your anxiety about global warming is dominated by fears of sea-level rise, you are barely scratching the surface of what terrors are possible—food shortages, refugee emergencies, climate wars and economic devastation.

An “epoch-defining book” (
The Guardian) and “this generation’s Silent Spring” (The Washington Post), The Uninhabitable Earth is both a travelogue of the near future and a meditation on how that future will look to those living through it—the ways that warming promises to transform global politics, the meaning of technology and nature in the modern world, the sustainability of capitalism and the trajectory of human progress.

The Uninhabitable Earth is also an impassioned call to action. For just as the world was brought to the brink of catastrophe within the span of a lifetime, the responsibility to avoid it now belongs to a single generation—today’s.

LONGLISTED FOR THE PEN/E.O. WILSON LITERARY SCIENCE WRITING AWARD

“The Uninhabitable Earth is the most terrifying book I have ever read. Its subject is climate change, and its method is scientific, but its mode is Old Testament. The book is a meticulously documented, white-knuckled tour through the cascading catastrophes that will soon engulf our warming planet.”—Farhad Manjoo, The New York Times

“Riveting. . . . Some readers will find Mr. Wallace-Wells’s outline of possible futures alarmist. He is indeed alarmed. You should be, too.”
The Economist

“Potent and evocative. . . . Wallace-Wells has resolved to offer something other than the standard narrative of climate change. . . . He avoids the ‘eerily banal language of climatology’ in favor of lush, rolling prose.”
—Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times

“The book has potential to be this generation’s 
Silent Spring.”—The Washington Post

The Uninhabitable Earth, which has become a best seller, taps into the underlying emotion of the day: fear. . . . I encourage people to read this book.”—Alan Weisman, The New York Review of Books

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5
3,657 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book has good information and sources about the benefits of spending time in nature. They also say it lays out a convincing argument for climate change and what will happen to the planet and humans. Readers describe it as an excellent book to read. Opinions are mixed on the writing style, with some finding it well-written and joy to read, while others say it's excessively wordy and relentlessly bleak. Reader opinions are mixed also on the tone, with others finding it scary but much more than that.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

122 customers mention "Content"106 positive16 negative

Customers find the book has good information and sources. They also say the author makes a convincing and alarming case for climate change. Readers also appreciate the page-indexed reference notations at the end. Overall, they find the content rewarding and well-founded.

"...However, overall, I found this to be a well written, interesting and engaging book that in the end was a pleasure to read...." Read more

"...As such it is speculation and admitted as such. But it is deeply informed speculation...." Read more

"...From the first sentence the author makes a convincing (and alarming) case that humanity will suffer greatly during the next 30 years..." Read more

"...The book, however, is well-researched and the extensive, page-indexed reference notations at the end are a useful, albeit somewhat cumbersome, tool..." Read more

99 customers mention "Readability"76 positive23 negative

Customers find the book excellent, compelling, and a valuable piece of work. They also say it's well-written and clear.

"...overall, I found this to be a well written, interesting and engaging book that in the end was a pleasure to read. I learned something from it." Read more

"This is a wonderful book. It's about climate change and the news isn't cheerful, but this is so well written it's a joy to read...." Read more

"...He hopes it isn't inevitable.This a good and timely book though I doubt it will have much effect on the carbon trajectory of our so-..." Read more

"This is a highly flawed book...." Read more

112 customers mention "Writing style"60 positive52 negative

Customers are mixed about the writing style. Some find the book well-written, interesting, and compelling. They also say it's clear and compelling, and a serious, well-founded attempt to paint the picture of climate change. However, other customers find the writing excessively wordy, rushed, and the narrative flow occasionally suffers. They say it gets repetitive and the picture is relentlessly bleak.

"...However, overall, I found this to be a well written, interesting and engaging book that in the end was a pleasure to read...." Read more

"...Some of the later chapters are confusing and poorly written, as the author struggles to make sense of humans' inability to address the causes..." Read more

"...It's about climate change and the news isn't cheerful, but this is so well written it's a joy to read...." Read more

"...: too many appositives, misplaced phrases and adjectives, lengthy run-on sentences, and a somewhat rambling, disjointed writing style, often detract..." Read more

53 customers mention "Tone"36 positive17 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the tone of the book. Some find it scary, alarming, and lyrical, while others find it depressing and terrifying.

"...The content is factual, sobering, and frightening enough...." Read more

"...Problem to solutions ratio is definitely 30:1. Ocerall, a good alarming read." Read more

"...It is a frightening and perhaps a depressing book, but it doesn’t predict the end of the world, it predicts a world that is much worse and partially..." Read more

"This is by far the most frightening book I’ve read in years...." Read more

15 customers mention "Emotional tone"4 positive11 negative

Customers find the emotional tone of the book depressing, not for the faint hearted, and extremely cynical. They also say the imagery is peppered with condescending appraisals and displays a shocking deficit of compassion.

""Things are very bad and are only going to get worse" is not the most inspirational theme for a book, nor is it one calculated to make people line..." Read more

"...Instead, it’s a horrorshow of doomsday imagery peppered with extremely cynical and condescending appraisals of our best efforts to fight warming...." Read more

"...We’ll written. Not sensationalist. A tribute to reporting. Makes me dread the hot wet dangerous future." Read more

"...of concern for our critter brethren, displaying a rather shocking deficit of compassion as well as a lack of understanding of the connections between..." Read more

Creating Hell (or not): The Choice Is Ours--Now
5 out of 5 stars
Creating Hell (or not): The Choice Is Ours--Now
Uninhabitable Earth; Life After Warming by David Wallace-WellsUsually, I write a book review to share a sense of joy or insights or pleasure that I've gained from reading a book. Not so with this book. I'm writing this book review in an attempt to purge the angst that I suffered from reading it, to turn the sense of dread and potential for despair I often felt while reading it into something more positive, into courageous action. Can I succeed? I hope so, for my sake and for the sake of any reader.Wallace-Wells undertakes two tasks in this book. First, he brings us up to date with the latest climate science and the most reliable prognostications about the effects of climate change. The works of thousands of scientists converge around a variety of hellscapes that would make Dante swoon. As Wallace-Wells points out, we've been conditioned to think that climate change is just rising sea levels or some warmer temperatures here and there. It's not nearly so simple. It's not "I don't live near the coast, so what's my worry," because the problem is manifold and ubiquitous. No one can escape. Yes, sea levels will rise. Temperatures will rise so that some areas to become nearly unhabitable, especially around the Middle East and India (and having lived in northern India, I have a sense of what extreme temperatures feel like). Droughts and floods will increase in frequency and severity. Wildfires, as Americans have seen within the past year in California and the Pacific Northwest, will increase in severity and frequency. Severe weather events, such as hurricanes and tornados, will proliferate and become stronger. Get ready for the designation of a Category 6 hurricane. Established diseases will spread (malaria, dengue fever, and zika will move north), and new pathological organisms will evolve in our hothouse atmosphere. Crops will fail and yields decline. Nature will survive, of course, but species and whole ecosystems will disappear. We'll see Nature altered in ways that we don't recognize and won't enjoy. Human beings will be forced to migrate to survive. And conflicts will proliferate and intensify, from domestic quarrels (and undoubtedly physical abuse) to wars and civil unrest. We seem intent on creating a perfectly Hobbesian world of the war of all against all.Is Wallace-Wells just another alarmist? Is this just a book with cheap thrills like a 50's horror flick? I wish. Wallace-Wells went into this research and writing project as someone who was cognizant of climate change, but who didn't hold it front and center of his concerns until, as a journalist, he saw an increasing flood of scientific papers that revealed a much more frightening future than most of the media was reporting. What Wallace-Wells discovered disturbed him and frightened him. But he hasn't given up hope, and neither should we.In fact, the second portion of the book, after establishing the likelihood of various varieties of hell that we humans are creating for ourselves--and we are creating it, and we are choosing it--Wallace-Wells turns to our responses and how individuals, societies, and nations may respond to the increasing pressures that we face.We humans, like most of our fellow creatures here on Earth, have three instinctive responses to threats: fight, flight, or freeze (even faint). I couldn't help but think along these lines as I read about reactions (or the lack of response) to our increasingly certain knowledge. As a whole, we've chosen to faint, to swoon at the thought of what we've wrought and then distract ourselves from our plight. We play mind games with ourselves to distract ourselves from the challenge at hand, and 21st-century consumer capitalism is most willing to enable us to do this. The Republican Party in Congress tries to pretend that the science is wrong and the problem unreal, 'another liberal plot" they say. Some say its just "God's will" and take a fatalistic approach justified on some bit of Bible misreading. Others seek to flee through technological panaceas, some of which may prove useful, but none of which promise reliable remedy and none of which can be attempted without immense costs and tremendous uncertainty about unintended consequences. The super-rich investigate how to govern the bunkers they're building to try to escape the wrath of the masses who will seek both vengeance and access to the resources that the super-rich have squirreled away. (But the super-rich remain worried about how to keep their guardians from turning on them.)The last option is to fight (climate change, not my fellow humans), and that's the option I'll take. We'll suffer significant--if not devastating--dislocations. We'll continue to see all sorts of changes, natural, social, economic, political, and cultural. But as Wallace-Wells makes clear, we have options and the potential to dramatically reduce the suffering that the future holds for all humans if we don't take sufficient steps to alleviate our plight. And I believe--or at least I possess a ray of hope--that we humans can respond in time (and time is of the essence). Thomas Friedman recently quoted an elementary but valuable insight from economic thinker Eric Beinhoffer: "there are only two ways to cure political tribalism: 'A common threat or a common project.'” Friedman uses this point to recommend that we need to undertake a common project to repair the foundations of the middle class. I suggest that repairing the foundations of the middle class must be subsumed under the project of dealing with climate change, which is a common threat and can become a common project. Indeed, starting now, we must re-imagine our political structures, our political economy, our entire culture. We have the potential to use the impending catastrophes to attempt to build a more just society. We either seek a just and sustainable world, or we can expect increasing international strife and civil anarchy. The range of possibilities for political, economic, and cultural change is vast, from outcomes that will prove (reasonably) attractive to appalling possibilities for anarchy or totalitarianism (and every nightmare in between).In listening to a couple of interviews of author David Wallace-Wells (The Ezra Klein Show & The Joe Rogen Experience), I was relieved to learn that he has an infant daughter, born while he was researching this topic. This fact reinforces his fundamental commitment to strive for the best possible outcome of our climate challenge, and it lets readers know that his hopeful words (there are some) don't represent publisher mandated pablum for readers. Wallace-Wells has to believe that we can take effective action to reduce our suffering and that of those who will come after us.One final comment: Again, from interviews, suggestions have been made that millennials will face this problem and must live with the consequences. Of course, this is true. But we baby-boomers have overseen an almost obscene increase in carbon in the atmosphere in the period since Al Gore released "An Inconvenient Truth" (2006). We bear the burden of responsibility for addressing our planetary illness. Alleviating the devastation of climate change must be a cross-generational project. We must begin the think in Burkean terms: society is a contract among generations past, present, and future. (If only there were more true conservatives!)Please, read this book and ponder your response. What shall we choose?
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2020
Drought, heat waves, freshwater scarcity, wildfires, sea level rise, extreme weather, floods, disease, changing eco-zones, crop yield decline, hunger, ocean acidification, dead zones in the ocean, mass extinction (of species), changes to oceanic and atmospheric circulation systems, plagues emerging from thawing tundra and melting ice, expanding tropics and expanding tropical diseases, economic collapse, climate refugees, violent conflicts rooted in climate change, the list of unfortunate consequences of climate change is long. Climate change isn’t just about polar bears and hurricanes, and it has already begun.

We have already left behind the narrow window (Goldilocks range) of environmental conditions and temperatures that allowed the human animal to evolve in the first place. Island countries are disappearing, Bangladesh is likely to be largely submerged mid century resulting in tens of millions of refugees, the Yemen, Sudan, and Syrian conflicts were preceded by draughts caused by or made much worse by climate change. It will be much worse at 2 degrees Celsius, and much worse than that at 2.5 degrees Celsius, and even worse at 3 degrees Celsius, etc.

Climate change may not be the direct cause of all of these phenomena, but it is exacerbating them, or as the military calls it, it is a threat multiplier. This is not a book about the science of warming; it is about what it means to the way we live on this planet. The author notes that climate change doesn’t end in 2100 even though most projections do. He says that what follows 2100 is likely the century of hell. I should say that even though the book is not about the climate science, what he describes is based on the science and there are several hundred notes and references at the end of the book organized by page.

It is a frightening and perhaps a depressing book, but it doesn’t predict the end of the world, it predicts a world that is much worse and partially unlivable, but how bad it gets depends on what we do today. What is missing is political will. The author does not discuss solutions much, but he seems to support a carbon tax, but I believe his chief intention is help his readers understand the seriousness of the situation as well as pointing out wrong attitudes. Believing we are all going to die in 10 years is not only inaccurate but fosters despondency and inaction. Denial or the downplaying of the problem is, of course, not helpful either. He states that personal choices, such as not eating meat, or driving less, are helpful but not enough. He stresses that political solutions are crucial. Personally, I favor a carbon fee and dividend approach, putting a price on carbon at the source and then returning the proceeds to households. It is very effective in reducing carbon emissions while not hurting the economy and helping the poor.

He said some things that may be controversial among some environmentalists but that I agree with. Nuclear Power is not as dangerous as it has been made out to be and it is a carbon free source. GMOs could help us fight hunger as the effects on agriculture from climate change set in. Some things I don’t agree with. He is dismissing Nick Boström’s concern about Artificial Intelligence gone wrong a little too quickly. As someone with a background in Artificial Intelligence and Robotics I have to say that this is a real concern. I also think that he is not characterizing neoliberalism and capitalism correctly, well it depends on what you mean. Denying the existence of economic externalities is plain stupid but free markets and free trade that includes regulations or price mechanisms to account for externalities such as climate change can be part of the solution rather than a cause of it.

In summary; the beginning of the book, with all the dark projections was a little bit heavy. However, overall, I found this to be a well written, interesting and engaging book that in the end was a pleasure to read. I learned something from it.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2019
This is a wonderful book. It's about climate change and the news isn't cheerful, but this is so well written it's a joy to read.

The author does not dwell on how we got here and doesn't spend much time on what's happening right now. The book is about the future. Specifically the 80 odd years from now to 2100. As such it is speculation and admitted as such. But it is deeply informed speculation. The last two fifths of the book are notes and so you can read the same research and draw your own conclusions. Roughly the first half of the book is about the effects of the warming. As the author points out this is really a systems problem. These effects are interrelated and are all facets of a shared problem. As the author says, this isn't just about sea level rise, it's about agriculture, it's about economics, it's about population migration, many things. The bottom line? At 2100 the research shows a normal (bell shaped) distribution of temperature rise. On the good side the best we can hope for is 1.5 to 2 degrees centigrade. The fat middle part of the distribution is 3ish degrees. The bad side of the distribution is 4 to 5 degrees. What could happen at 3 or 4? For one we could have economic effects much worse than the Great Depression.

The second part of the book is about why we don't respond to such a dire threat. This section is at least as interesting as the first part. I found this deeply fascinating as I didn't understand this as well. Many aspects worth considering.

In short, I think you should read this book. Doesn't matter what side of the debate you're on it's worth considering these ideas. And if you disagree you can check out the literature and see why the author made the point that he did. And if you do agree, why are you not doing something about it?

Buy this book!
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Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2019
Reading the first section of this book is a sobering experience. From the first sentence the author makes a convincing (and alarming) case that humanity will suffer greatly during the next 30 years (as well as far beyond) because of the devastating effects of climate change. Short, succinct chapters call the reader's attention to the inescapable fact that the Earth will get warmer, threatening our air, water, land, and eventually our basic existence. The only major question is how much warmer? The answer is of course complex, and depends on human behavior and climate forecasts. Sure to happen will be a serious increment of warming and the resulting major problems, but lack of effective action now will produce even greater warming and catastrophes. The author draws upon research from scientists to make his case, and gives their ideas without the overabundant caution scientists seem forced to use. Thus, the reader gets the essential message: "It's worse, much worse, than you thought".
Unfortunately, this book suffers from several flaws that I found annoying and distracting:
1) Some of the later chapters are confusing and poorly written, as the author struggles to make sense of humans' inability to address the causes of climate change, and to often even acknowledge the threat.
2) He repeatedly states that many actions which will slow climate change are available and known, but he should have written a clear chapter which summarized them.
3) The projections and various forecasts made during the book are sometimes inconsistent.
4) The chapter on Capitalism's future seemed mushy, but in fairmess, this topic deserves an entire book on its own.
Overall, this book would have greatly benefited from a thorough editing job by someone like Malcolm Gladwell, who I admit is one of my favorite "science writers". However, I applaud the author's courage to boldly show us our dismal future.
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Top reviews from other countries

Evan
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice read
Reviewed in France on June 20, 2021
A scary but wheel written book.
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Evan
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice read
Reviewed in France on June 20, 2021
A scary but wheel written book.
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cant reveal identity
5.0 out of 5 stars Just read the book
Reviewed in India on May 29, 2021
If you have come across this book and if you care even a little about life, earth or future, just read this book. Not an easy read, the author even says so himself, but an important read.
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sean s.
5.0 out of 5 stars The Most Important Book on the Climate Change Crisis since Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything
Reviewed in Canada on March 31, 2019
This is arguably the most important book on the climate change crisis since Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything (2014). David Wallace-Wells writes:

‘When critics of Al Gore compare his electricity use to that of the average Ugandan, they are not ultimately highlighting conspicuous and hypothetical personal consumption, however they mean to disparage him. Instead, they are calling attention to the structure of a political and economic order that not only permits this disparity, but feeds and profits from it – this is what Thomas Piketty calls the ‘apparatus of justification.’ And it justifies quite a lot. If the world’s most conspicuous emitters, the top 10 percent, reduced their emissions to only the EU average, total global emissions would fall by 35 percent.’

Indeed, the 2018 Global Green Economy Index points out that the most environmentally-friendly countries in the world are 1. Sweden 2. Switzerland 3. Iceland 4. Norway 5. Finland – countries which also enjoy a high quality of life.

Hence Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal is absolutely correct that it is possible to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2030. Furthermore, Stanford University professor Mark Jacobson has provided country-by-country plans for the world to transition to 100 percent renewable energy by 2050. So why the delay?

In his book Cultural Evolution (2018), Dr. Ronald Inglehart, leader of the World Values Survey, points out that following World War II, the advanced world shifted from materialist to postmaterialist values, including a growth in the environmental movement. However, this evolution in mindset was not reflected rapidly enough in our actions.

‘Many people perceive global warming as a sort of moral and economic debt, accumulated since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and now come due after several centuries. In fact, more than half of the carbon exhaled into the atmosphere by the burning of fossil fuels has been emitted in just the past three decades… The story of the industrial world’s kamikaze mission is the story of a single lifetime – the planet brought from seeming stability to the brink of catastrophe in the years between a baptism or bar mitzvah and a funeral…

Due to global warming, in the sugarcane region of El Salvador, as much as one-fifth of the population has chronic kidney disease, the presumed result of dehydration from working the fields they were able to comfortably harvest as recently as two decades ago…

The Indian capital is home to 26 million people. In 2017, simply breathing the air was the equivalent of smoking more than two packs of cigarettes a day…

With CO2 at 930 parts per million (more than double where we are at today), cognitive ability declines by 21 percent…
The basic rule of thumb for staple cereal crops grown at optimal temperature, is that for every degree of warming, yields decline by 10 percent. Which means that if the planet is five degrees warmer at the end of the century, when we have 50 percent more people to feed, we may also have 50 percent less grain to give them…

Beyond carbon, climate change means that staple crops are doing battle with more insects – their increased activity could cut yields an additional 2 to 4 percent, as well as fungus and disease, not to mention flooding…

Whole cultures will be transformed into underwater relics, like sunken ships, this century: any beach you’ve ever visited, Facebook’s headquarters, the Kennedy Space Center, and the United States’ largest naval base in Norfolk, Virginia; the entire nation of the Maldives and the Marshall Islands; most of Bangladesh; all of Miami Beach and much of South Florida; Saint Mark’s Basilica in Venice; Venice Beach and Santa Monica in Los Angeles; the White House at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington…

Much of the infrastructure of the internet could be drowned by sea-level rise in less than two decades; and most of the smartphones we use to navigate it are manufactured in Shenzhen, which is likely to be flooded soon, as well…

If no significant action is taken to curb emissions, one estimate of global damage is as high as $100 trillion dollars per year by 2100. That is more than global GDP today. Most estimates are a bit lower - $14 trillion a year, still almost a fifth of present-day GDP…

The International Panel on Climate Change furnishes us with a median prediction of an over four degrees rise in planetary temperature by 2100, should we continue down the current emissions path. That would deliver wildfires burning 16 times as much land in the American West, hundreds of drowned cities…’

Unfortunately, Canada has been a laggard on this critical issue. Prime Minister Trudeau seems to have only recently woken up to the existential threat posed by climate change, and has finally introduced a modest carbon tax. The Andrew Scheer Conservatives remain for their part firmly in the pocket of the fossil fuels industry, and are every bit as destructive to the environment as the Trump Republicans in the US.

On the other hand, organizations like 350.org, the Solutions Project and the Sunrise Movement, and political leaders like Germany’s Katharina Schulze, France’s Karima Delli, Sweden’s Isabella Lovin, the Netherland’s Jesse Klaver, Belgium’s Benoit Hellings, and Costa Rica’s Carlos Alvarado Quesada are leading the way to a sustainable future.

They are joined by youth leaders Greta Thunberg (Sweden), Varshini Prakash and Alexandria Villasenor (United States), Holly Gillibrand (UK), Luisa Neubauer (Germany), Louis Couillard, Sara Montpetit and Autumn Peltier (Canada), Jonas Kampus (Switzerland), and Anuna de Wever (Belgium).

The least we can do, is to give them our support – our future depends on it.
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Mac McAleer
5.0 out of 5 stars It is worse, much worse, than you think
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 4, 2019
“It is worse, much worse, than you think”, says the opening line in the book. Later, at page 11, it says “This is not a book about the science of global warming; it is about what warming means to the way we live on this planet”. (1)

The first impression of this book is of starkness. The front cover is plain, with the book’s title, its subtitle and author on a plain off-white background. The only decoration is a small picture of a bee at the bottom of the cover. The bee looks inactive, probably dead. Inside the book is text. There are no charts, no illustrations, no maps, just text. The small picture of the author on the back inside cover is in black and white, and he is not smiling. The contents are equally stark (2). However, after the author David Wallace-Wells has made the reader look into the mouth of Hell, he then pulls you back and shows that redemption is still possible through prompt actions.

The author is a journalist, not a scientist. The book is readable. The book is well researched. The contents are disturbing. Everyone should read this book. Hurry up please. It’s time.

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(1) There is a long history of doomsday predictions. For Climate Change, Al Gore’s 
An Inconvenient Truth  is the most recent and most famous. Earlier, there was Paul R. Ehrlich’s  The Population Bomb  and The Club of Rome’s  Limits to Growth . However, just because we are still here does not mean these books were wrong.
(2) The book is divided into sections titled: I Cascades, II Elements of Chaos, III The Climate Kaleidoscope, IV The Anthropic Principle, Acknowledgments, Notes, Index.
The first section, Cascades, is a single chapter of over 30 pages. It serves as a general introduction. The title comes from climate cascades, where multiple climate events occur. Towards the end of the section (page 35), the following section, “Elements of Chaos” is introduced as “The science that makes up the following twelve chapters has been culled from interviews from dozens of expert, and from hundreds of papers published in the best academic journals over the previous decade or so. Since it is science, it is tentative, ever-evolving, and some of the predictions that follow will surely not come to pass”.
Elements of Chaos - The chapters are: Heat Death, Hunger, Drowning, Wildfire, Disasters No Longer Natural, Freshwater Drain, Dying Oceans, Unbreathable Air, Economic Collapse, Climate Conflict, “Systems”.
Having survived the horrors of the chapters in “Elements of Chaos”, the next section, “Climate Kaleidoscope” is more discursive and thoughtful. It asks what stories we will tell ourselves when climate change is undeniable and can no longer be ignored. How will business react? What about Silicon Valley? If we really think that we are moving towards the end of days, what will happen to our belief systems?
The Climate Kaleidoscope - The chapters are: Storytelling, Crisis Capitalism, The Church of Technology, Politics of Consumption, History After Progress, Ethics at the End of the World.
The last section is “The Anthropic Principle”. This is a single chapter of ten pages that acts as a conclusion to the book. The science of climate change is persuasive, but there is still much to understand. The complexity of climate may contain feedback loops that we have not considered. The solutions to climate change are available to us, but we have to start implementing them in earnest. We have to start thinking like a planet. There is no second chance and no second planet.
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Stephen S.
5.0 out of 5 stars WHAT YOU DON'T WANT TO HEAR
Reviewed in Spain on May 15, 2019
Stunning. This is very late in coming -- maybe too late.