Great power entails greater responsibility.
If you don't care about global warming, then you should read this book. If you care about global warming, then you should read this book.
An excerpt of a good review from NYTimes:
If you don't care about global warming, then you should read this book. If you care about global warming, then you should read this book.
An excerpt of a good review from NYTimes:
. . . .“The
Uninhabitable Earth” seems to be modeled more on Rachel Carson’s
“Silent Spring” — or, at least, it’s a bid to do for greenhouse gases what Carson’s 1962 book did for pesticides.
“Silent Spring” became a galvanizing force, a foundational text for the
environmental movement. The overarching frame for Wallace-Wells’s book
is an analogous call to action: “How much will we do to stall disaster,
and how quickly?”
Part of his
strategy is to tell us how much we have already lost. “The climate
system that raised us, and raised everything we now know as human
culture and civilization, is now, like a parent, dead,” he writes. Some
of the technology we rely on to make the effects of climate change more
bearable, like air-conditioning, also worsens them. The harms of global
warming tend to fall disproportionately on poorer people and poorer
countries, but the “cascades” already set in motion will eventually grow
so enormous and indiscriminate that not even the rich will be spared.
Wallace-Wells
avoids the “eerily banal language of climatology” in favor of lush,
rolling prose. The sentences in this book are potent and evocative,
though after a while of envisioning such unremitting destruction — page
upon page of toddlers dying, plagues released by melting permafrost and
wildfires incinerating tourists at seaside resorts — I began to feel
like a voyeur at an atrocity exhibition. His New York magazine article
already synthesized plenty of information about perilous climate risks
and scared the bejeezus out of people; what are we supposed to do with
this expanded litany of horrors?
“Fear
can motivate,” Wallace-Wells writes. He’s aware of those who denounce
the graphic doomsaying as “climate porn,” but he arrived at his own
ecological awakening when he started to collect “terrifying, gripping,
uncanny narratives” about climate change. He describes himself as a
Bitcoin-buying, non-recycling city-dweller who hates camping. He was
scared out of his “fatally complacent, and willfully deluded” inertia
when he became immersed in the awful truth and, his book suggests, you
can be too.
Besides, it’s not as if
any of the hair-raising material with which he has become intimately
familiar has paralyzed him with fatalism — quite the opposite. “That we
know global warming is our doing should be a comfort, not a cause for
despair,” he writes. What some activists have called “toxic knowledge” —
all the intricate feedback loops of societal collapse — “should be
empowering.” . . . .
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