RECOMMENDED BOOKS
There are staggering quantities of great books available, very few of which are fiction although that is changing with the publication of the bestseller Neal Stephenson’s Termination Shock (November 2021), the stunning Kim Stanley Robinson science fiction entry, The Ministry for the Future (October 2020) and A Children’s Bible, chosen by The New York Times as one of the top ten best books of 2020.
This is a curated list of the best books for adults, from Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962) which set the stage for understanding the impact humans were having on the planet, Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth (2006) which made it abundantly clear, to Elizabeth Kolbert’s The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History (2014), Paul Hawken’s Drawdown (2017), and Richard Powers’ The Overstory (2019), a Pulitzer Prize-winning work of fiction and ode to trees — all bestsellers from the time they were published.
We have starred some titles with which we have personal history and others which have come highly recommended. Some are general like Joe Romm’s Climate Change: What Everyone Needs to Know, and some highly specific like The Soil Will Save Us by Kristin Ohlson, Naomi Klein’s highly political This Changes Everything, and John Englander’s Moving to Higher Ground. When Sir David Attenborough published, at the age of 93, his A Life on Our Planet, he called it his witness statement and his vision for the future. What a giant of a man.
In May, 2020, we read the first of Michael Svoboda’s recommended list of recent books on climate activism for Yale Climate Connections. In January, 2021 he added a new list. The first three titles, Michael Mann’s The New Climate War, Bill Gates’ How To Avoid a Climate Disaster, and Elizabeth Kolbert’s Under a White Sky immediately got gold stars from us. Svoboda’s September, 2021, roundup selected, among others, Katharine Hayhoe’s Saving Us: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World. A climate researcher, scientist, evangelical Christian and brilliant climate communicator, this is a must read. In December, 2021, within his list for the holidays, there were three more we had already fallen for: Paul Hawken’s Regeneration (who previously wrote the groundbreaking Drawdown), Saul Griffith’s Electrify (focusing on solving the climate crisis AND saving money by electrifying everything --and powering that electricity with clean energy), and Anthony Doerr’s Cloud Cuckoo Land (a gorgeous novel whose previous book, All The Light We Cannot See, was also a triumph) and seven more to explore.
Michael Svoboda is back again with another list of great climate change books. His focus, this time, is on extreme weather and he has twelve recommendations from renowned University of Oxford researcher Friederike Otto’s Angry Weather to the newest title (on extreme weather) in a wonderful series for Grade 3 level readers ranging from air quality to rising sea levels.
You might also find it interesting to read all of Skeptical Science’s reviews of Michael Mann’s The New Climate War. It has become a classic overnight.
In October, 2022 The Scheme: How the Right-wing Used Dark Money to Capture the Supreme Court by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse with Jennifer Mueller will be published. Full of inside stories, The Scheme pulls back the curtain on the hidden apparatus that has spent years trying to corrupt our politics, control our courts, and degrade our democracy.
We have also become increasingly impressed by the Writer’s Voice with Francesca Rheannon, (available on radio and as a podcast) where she interviews any number of authors who are concerned with climate change, including Saul Griffith, Elizabeth Kolbert, Michael Mann, and John Englander whose Moving to Higher Ground really is the last word on the implications of sea level rise.
If you click on any title below, you will be taken to Amazon. If you buy, this website will receive a small contribution, for which we will be grateful.
Amazon also has best selling books on climate ranked from 1-100 here.
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A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety: How to Keep Your Cool on a Warming Planet (2020)
By Sarah Jaquette Ray. Published by University of California PressA 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.A New Coast: Strategies for Responding to Devastating Storms and Rising Seas (2019)
By Jeffrey Peterson. Published by Island PressMore severe storms and rising seas will inexorably push the American coastline inland with profound impact on communities, infrastructure, and natural systems. In A New Coast, Jeffrey Peterson draws a comprehensive picture of how storms and rising seas will change the coast. Peterson offers a clear-eyed assessment of how governments can work with the private sector and citizens to be better prepared for the coming coastal inundation.A Planet to Win: Why We Need a Green New Deal (Jacobin) (2019)
By Kate Aronoff. Published by VersoThe age of climate gradualism is over, as unprecedented disasters are exacerbated by inequalities of race and class. We need profound, radical change.A Poison Like No Other: How Microplastics Corrupted Our Planet and Our Bodies Hardcover – October 27, 2022
By Matt SimonIt’s falling from the sky and in the air we breathe. It’s in our food, our clothes, and our homes. It’s microplastic and it’s everywhere—including our own bodies. Scientists are just beginning to discover how these tiny particles threaten health, but the studies are alarming.A Sand County Almanac (Outdoor Essays & Reflections) (1986)
By Aldo Leopold. Published by Ballantine BooksThese astonishing portraits of the natural world explore the breathtaking diversity of the unspoiled American landscape—the mountains and the prairies, the deserts and the coastlines. Conjuring up one extraordinary vision after another, Aldo Leopold takes readers with him on the road and through the seasons on a fantastic tour of our priceless natural resources, explaining the destructive effects humankind has had on the land and issuing a bold challenge to protect the world we love.American War: A Novel (2018)
By Omar El Akkad. Published by VintageAn audacious and powerful debut novel: a second American Civil War, a devastating plague, and one family caught deep in the middle—a story that asks what might happen if America were to turn its most devastating policies and deadly weapons upon itself.An Inconvenient Truth: The Planetary Emergency of Global Warming and What We Can Do About It (2008)
By Al Gore. Published by Simon & Schuster AudioAn Inconvenient Truth—Gore's groundbreaking, battle cry of a follow-up to the bestselling Earth in the Balance—is being published to tie in with a documentary film of the same name. Both the book and film were inspired by a series of multimedia presentations on global warming that Gore created and delivers to groups around the world. With this book, Gore, who is one of our environmental heroes—and a leading expert—brings together leading-edge research from top scientists around the world; photographs, charts, and other illustrations; and personal anecdotes and observations to document the fast pace and wide scope of global warming. He presents, with alarming clarity and conclusiveness—and with humor, too—that the fact of global warming is not in question and that its consequences for the world we live in will be disastrous if left unchecked. This riveting new book—written in an accessible, entertaining style—will open the eyes of even the most skeptical.Angry Weather: Heat Waves, Floods, Storms, and the New Science of Climate Change
By Friederike Otto Published by Greystone BooksFrom leading climate scientist Dr. Friederike Otto, this gripping book reveals the revolutionary science that definitively links extreme weather events—including deadly heat waves, forest fires, floods, and hurricanes—to climate change.Antarctica: The Waking Giant (2020)
By Sebastian Copeland. Published by Rizzoli International Publications, Inc.Winner of three 2020 International Photography Awards and named Photographer of the Year from the Tokyo International Awards, explorer Sebastian Copeland's stunning photography delivers unparalleled access to the least explored continent on Earth and galvanizes our awareness of the threats of global warming.Blowout: Corrupted Democracy, Rogue State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth (2019)
By Rachel Maddow. Published by CrownWith her trademark black humor, Maddow takes us on a switchback journey around the globe, revealing the greed and incompetence of Big Oil and Gas along the way, and drawing a surprising conclusion about why the Russian government hacked the 2016 U.S. election.Building a Resilient Tomorrow: How to Prepare for the Coming Climate Disruption (2020)
By Alice C. Hill and Leonardo Martinez-Diaz. Published by Oxford University PressClimate change impacts-more heat, drought, extreme rainfall, and stronger storms-have already harmed communities around the globe. Even if the world could cut its carbon emissions to zero tomorrow, further significant global climate change is now inevitable.Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water (1993)
By Marc Reisner. Published by Penguin BooksThe story of the American West is the story of a relentless quest for a precious resource: water. It is a tale of rivers diverted and dammed, of political corruption and intrigue, of billion-dollar battles over water rights, of ecological and economic disaster.Dark Money: The Hidden History of the Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right( 2017)
By Jane Mayer. Published by AnchorWho are the immensely wealthy right-wing ideologues shaping the fate of America today? From the bestselling author of The Dark Side, an electrifying work of investigative journalism that uncovers the agenda of this powerful group.Disposable City Miami’s Future on the Shores of Climate Catastrophe (2020)
By Mario Alejandro Ariza. Published by Bold Type BooksA deeply-reported personal investigation by a Miami journalist into the present and future effects of climate change in the Magic City-a watery harbinger for coastal cities worldwide.Facing the Climate Emergency: How to Transform Yourself with Climate Truth (2020)
By Margaret Klein Salamon. Published by New Society PublishersAs the climate crisis accelerates toward the collapse of civilization and the natural world, people everywhere are feeling deep pain about ecological destruction and their role in it. Yet we are often paralyzed by fear. Help is at hand.Fire Weather: A True Story from a Hotter World
By John Vaillant Published by KNOPFA stunning account of a colossal wildfire that collided with a city, and a panoramic exploration of the rapidly changing relationship between fire and humankind from the award-winning, best-selling authorFixation: How to Have Stuff Without Breaking the Planet Fio
By Sandra Goldmark. Published by Tantor AudioOur massive global system of consumption is broken. Our individual relationship with our stuff is broken. In each of our homes, some stuff is broken. And the strain of rampant consumerism and manufacturing is breaking our planet. We need big systemic changes, from public policy to global economic systems.Horizon
By Barry Lopez Publisher: KnopfFrom pole to pole and across decades of lived experience, National Book Award-winning author Barry Lopez delivers his most far-ranging, yet personal, work to date. Horizon moves indelibly, immersively, through the author’s travels to six regions of the world: from Western Oregon to the High Arctic; from the Galápagos to the Kenyan desert; from Botany Bay in Australia to finally, unforgettably, the ice shelves of Antarctica.How Change Happens (The MIT Press) (2019)
By Cass R. Sunstein. Published by The MIT PressHow does social change happen? When do social movements take off? Sexual harassment was once something that women had to endure; now a movement has risen up against it. White nationalist sentiments, on the other hand, were largely kept out of mainstream discourse; now there is no shortage of media outlets for them.Humanity’s Moment: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope (2022)
By Joëlle Gergis. Published by Black Inc.In Humanity’s Moment, Joëlle takes us through the science in the IPCC report with clear-eyed honesty, explaining what it means for our future, while sharing her personal reflections on bearing witness to the heartbreak of the climate emergency unfolding in real time. But this is not a lament for a lost world. It is an inspiring reminder that human history is an endless tug-of-war for social justice. We are each a part of an eternal evolutionary force that can transform our world.Inconspicuous Consumption: The Environmental Impact You Don’t Know You Have (2019)
By Tatiana Schlossberg. Published by Grand Central PublishingThis book careens and skitters across the landscape of its topic, which means I now know a number of interesting things I didn’t know when I picked it up.Industrial-Strength Denial: Eight Stories of Corporations Defending the Indefensible, from the Slave Trade to Climate Change (2020)
By Barbara Freese. Published by University of California PressCorporations faced with proof that they are hurting people or the planet have a long history of denying evidence, blaming victims, complaining of witch hunts, attacking their critics’ motives, and otherwise rationalizing their harmful activities.Kiss the Ground: How the Food You Eat Can Reverse Climate Change, Heal Your Body & Ultimately Save Our World (2018)
By Josh Tickell and Terry Tamminen. Published by Atria/Enliven BooksFrom Josh Tickell, one of America’s most celebrated documentary filmmakers, comes a “fascinating, easy-to-follow blueprint for how eating in ways that nourish and regenerate the soil can not only help reverse global warming, but also bring greater vitality to our lives” (Wolfgang Puck).Now That You Know (2023)
By David Houle, Tim Rumage and Bob Leonard. Published by David Houle & AssociatesThis eBook aims to provide a quick read to let you know what is going on with our climate crisis, why it is occurring and what can be done to address it effectively. The title of the book is also the title of the last chapter. Having spent the one to two hours to read this eBook, you will be prepared to change your thinking and actions, now that you know.Polar Tales: The Future of Ice, Life, and the Arctic (2020)
By Fredrik Granath. Published by Rizzoli International Publications, Inc.The Arctic is the ground zero of climate change, and the polar bear is on the front line. Filled with groundbreaking photography that reveals the breathtaking landscapes of the Arctic and the transformations of the environment through the changing lives of polar bears, it's a firsthand report from the top of our planet.Politics Is for Power: How to Move Beyond Political Hobbyism, Take Action, and Make Real Change (2020)
By Eitan Hersh. Published by ScribnerWho is to blame for our broken politics? The uncomfortable answer to this question starts with ordinary citizens with good intentions. We vote (sometimes) and occasionally sign a petition or attend a rally. But we mainly “engage” by consuming politics as if it’s a sport or a hobby.Rocking the Cradle of Civilization: Volumes I and II (2021)
By John Slade Published by John Slade BooksPrairie Wind is fiercely determined, as a student, as a bride, as a young mother, to restore the health of Mother Earth, and to build a Global Generation unprecedented in human history. Her story—your story—is about our world today. She hopes that you will join her. Because she is going to win.Salmon: A Fish, the Earth, and the History of Their Common Fate (2020)
By Mark Kurlansky. Published by PatagoniaIn What He Says Is The Most Important Piece Of Environmental Writing In His Long And Award-winning Career, Mark Kurlansky, Best-selling Author Of Salt And Cod, The Big Oyster, 1968, And Milk, Among Many Others, Employs His Signature Multi-century Storytelling And Compelling Attention To Detail To Chronicle The Harrowing Yet Awe-inspiring Life Cycle Of Salmon.Shorting the Grid: The Hidden Fragility of Our Electric Grid
By Meredith Angwin. Published by Carnot CommunicationsWhen rolling blackouts come to the electric grid, they will be old news to the grid insiders. Only the electricity customers will be surprised. Grid insiders know how fragile the grid is becoming. Unfortunately, they have no incentive to solve the problems because near-misses increase their profits.The Big Fix: Seven Practical Steps to Save Our Planet
By Hal HarveyDozens of kids in Montgomery County, Maryland, agitated until their school board committed to electric school buses. Mothers in Colorado turned up in front of an obscure state panel to fight for clean air. If you think the only thing you can do to combat climate change is to install a smart thermostat or cook plant-based burgers, you’re thinking too small. That’s where The Big Fix comes in, offering everyday citizens a guide to the seven essential changes our communities must enact to bring our greenhouse gas emissions down to zero—and sharing stories of people who are making those changes reality.The Cathedrals of the 21st Century (2022)
By John Slade Published by John Slade BooksThe Cathedrals of the 21st Century is an unprecedented novel which takes us from “the world as it is”—battered by the climate crisis, devastated by unrelenting war—to “the world as it could be”—green and peaceful, as the world was meant to be. This novel is not a fantasy, but a realistic story based on thirty years of research in the interwoven fields of war, climate change, and clean energy. We follow three young Ukrainian soldiers as they move from the constant threat of death in the war zone, to a vibrant university in Scotland, where the Renaissance of the 21st Century has already begun. Their job is to learn a profession, then return to their home country as experts who can help to rebuild a new Ukraine.The Climate Book: The Facts and the Solutions (2023)
By Greta Thunberg. Published by Penguin PressIn The Climate Book, Greta Thunberg has gathered the wisdom of over one hundred experts - geophysicists, oceanographers and meteorologists; engineers, economists and mathematicians; historians, philosophers and indigenous leaders - to equip us all with the knowledge we need to combat climate disaster. Throughout, illuminating and often shocking grayscale charts, graphs, diagrams, photographs, and illustrations underscore their research and their arguments. Alongside them, she shares her own stories of demonstrating and uncovering greenwashing around the world, revealing how much we have been kept in the dark.The Future Earth: A Radical Vision for What’s Possible in the Age of Warming (2020)
By Eric Holthaus. Published by HarperOneThe first hopeful book about climate change, The Future Earth shows readers how to reverse the short- and long-term effects of climate change over the next three decades.The Future We Choose: Surviving the Climate Crisis (2020)
By Christiana Figueres. Published by KnopfIn The Future We Choose, Christiana Figueres and Tom Rivett-Carnac--who led negotiations for the United Nations during the historic Paris Agreement of 2015--have written a cautionary but optimistic book about the world's changing climate and the fate of humanity.The Great Displacement
By Jake Bittle Publisher: Simon & SchusterAn urgent, perceptive analysis of how climate change is already changing where Americans live. Though most readers worry about climate change, many assume that it will arrive in full force later in the century and wreak greatest havoc elsewhere in the world. They will quickly learn their error as journalist Bittle delivers expert accounts of seven humanitarian disasters, all within the U.S. and currently in progress. Only a few feet above sea level, “the thousand-odd islands that make up the Florida Keys are the first flock of canaries in the coal mine of climate change.”The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet
By Jeff Goodell Published by Little, Brown and CompanyMost Anticipated by The New York Times and The Washington Post• New York Times bestselling journalist's "masterful, bracing" (David Wallace-Wells) investigation exposes "through stellar reporting, artful storytelling and fascinating scientific explanations" (Naomi Klein) an explosive new understanding of heat and the impact that rising temperatures will have on our lives and on our planet. "Entertaining and thoroughly researched," (Al Gore), it will completely change the way you see the world, and despite its urgent themes, is injected with "eternal optimism" (Michael Mann) on how to combat one of the most important issues of our time.The Ice at the End of the World (2019)
By John Gertner. Published by Random HouseA riveting, urgent account of the explorers and scientists racing to understand the rapidly melting ice sheet in Greenland, a dramatic harbinger of climate change.The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where to Go from Here (2020)
By Hope Jahren. Published by VintageHope Jahren is an award-winning scientist, a brilliant writer, a passionate teacher, and one of the seven billion people with whom we share this earth. In The Story of More, she illuminates the link between human habits and our imperiled planet.The World-Ending Fire: The Essential Wendell Berry
By Wendell Berry Publisher: CounterpointThe writings gathered in The World-Ending Fire are the unique product of a life spent farming the fields of rural Kentucky with mules and horses, and of the rich, intimate knowledge of the land cultivated by this work. These are essays written in defiance of the false call to progress and in defense of local landscapes, essays that celebrate our cultural heritage, our history, and our home.Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future (2021) ⭐️
By Elizabeth Kolbert. Published by CrownThe Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Sixth Extinction returns to humanity’s transformative impact on the environment, now asking: After doing so much damage, can we change nature, this time to save it?Waste (2019)
By Kate O'Neill. Published by PolityWaste is one of the planet’s last great resource frontiers. From furniture made from up-cycled wood to gold extracted from computer circuit boards, artisans and multinational corporations alike are finding ways to profit from waste while diverting materials from overcrowded landfills.Water Always Wins: Thriving in an Age of Drought and Deluge
By Erica GiesNearly every human endeavor on the planet was conceived and constructed with a relatively stable climate in mind. But as new climate disasters remind us every day, our world is not stable—and it is changing in ways that expose the deep dysfunction of our relationship with water. But as we grapple with extreme weather, a hard truth is emerging: our development, including concrete infrastructure designed to control water, is actually exacerbating our problems. Because sooner or later, water always wins.Weather
By Jenny OffillLizzie works in the library of a university where she was once a promising graduate student. Her side hustle is answering the letters that come in to Hell and High Water, the doom-laden podcast hosted by her former mentor. At first it suits her, this chance to practice her other calling as an unofficial shrink—she has always played this role to her divorced mother and brother recovering from addiction—but soon Lizzie finds herself struggling to strike the obligatory note of hope in her responses.The Age of Sustainable Development (2015) ⭐️
By Jeffrey Sachs. Published by Columbia University PressJeffrey D. Sachs is one of the world's most perceptive and original analysts of global development. In this major new work he presents a compelling and practical framework for how global citizens can use a holistic way forward to address the seemingly intractable worldwide problems of persistent extreme poverty, environmental degradation, and political-economic injustice: sustainable development.2040: A Handbook for the Regeneration: Based on the Documentary 2040 (2020)
By Damon Gameau. Published by Macmillan AustraliaLike most of us, Damon Gameau has spent most of his adult years overwhelmed into inaction by the problem of climate change and its devastating effects on the planet. But when Damon became a father, he decided to do what he does best, and tell a story. The story became an imagining of what the world could look like in 2040, if we all decided to start doing things differently, right now. The result is the era-defining documentary 2040—a meticulously researched plea for the adoption of community-building, energy-generating, connection-forging, forest-renewing, ocean-replenishing measures that science tells us will reset our planet's health, drive our economies and improve lives across the globe.A Bright Future: How Some Countries Have Solved Climate Change and the Rest Can Follow (2019)
By Joshua S. Goldstein and Staffan A. Qvist. Published by PublicAffairsThe first book to offer a proven, fast, inexpensive, practical way to cut greenhouse gas emissions and prevent catastrophic climate change. Reviewed in The NY Times book review 2/10/19 by Richard Rhodes, who wrote Energy: A Human History.A Climate for Change: Global Warming Facts for Faith-Based Decisions (2015)
By Katharine Hayhoe. Published by The University of New Mexico PressDrawing on the two authors' experiences, one as an internationally recognized climate scientist and the other as an evangelical leader of a growing church, this book explains the science underlying global warming, the impact that human activities have on it, and how our Christian faith should play a significant role in guiding our opinions and actions on this important issue.A Global Warming Primer: Answering Your Questions about the Science, the Consequences and the Solutions (2016)
By Jeffrey Bennett. Published by Big Kid ScienceFeaturing clear, well-written, and concise arguments, this book is ideal for both climate-change believers and skeptics. Few books are as straightforward, comprehensive, and visually descriptive as in this book – accessible even to young teenagers.A Human Health Perspective on Climate Change (2015)
By Interagency Working Group on Climate Change and Health. Published by Environmental Health PerspectivesThis is a report organized around 11 human healthy conditions predicted to be most dramatically affected by climate change.A Life on Our Planet: My Witness Statement and a Vision for the Future (2020)
By Sir David Attenborough. Published by Grand Central PublishingIn this scientifically informed account of the changes occurring in the world over the last century, award-winning broadcaster and natural historian shares a lifetime of wisdom and a hopeful vision for the future.A Planet of 3 Billion: Mapping Humanity’s Long History of Ecological Destruction and Finding Our Way to a Resilient Future A Global Citizen’s Guide to Saving the Planet (2019)
By Christopher Kevin Tucker. Published by Atlas Observatory PressHow many people can the Earth support? Tucker makes the case that the Earth's 'carrying capacity' is limited to 3 billion humans, and that humanity's century long binge has incurred an unsustainable ecological debt that must be paid down promptly, or else cataclysm awaits. Given that our species has already surpassed 7.5 billion, and is fast approaching 9 billion or more, this is an audacious claim that everyone who cares about the fate of our planet and our species has a responsibility to evaluate for themselves.All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis (2020)
By Ayana Elizabeth Johnson. Published by One WorldDrawing on the two authors' experiences, one as an internationally recognized climate scientist and the other as an evangelical leader of a growing church, this book explains the science underlying global warming, the impact that human activities have on it, and how our Christian faith should play a significant role in guiding our opinions and actions on this important issue.An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power (2017)
By Al Gore. Published by Rodale BooksA daring call to action, exposing the reality of how humankind has aided in the destruction of our planet and groundbreaking information on what you can do now.Are We Screwed?: How a New Generation is Fighting to Survive Climate Change (2017)
By Geoff Dembicki. Published by The University of New Mexico PressA declaration of resistance, and a roadmap for radical change, from the generation that will be most screwed by climate change. The Millennial generation could be first to experience the doomsday impacts of climate change. It's also the last generation able to do something about them. With time ticking down, 31-year-old journalist Geoff Dembicki journeyed to Silicon Valley, Canada's tar sands, Washington, DC, Wall Street and the Paris climate talks to find out if he should hope or despair. What he learned surprised him. Millions of people his age want to radically change our world, and they are at the forefront of resistance to the politicians and CEOs steering our planet towards disaster.Behind the Carbon Curtain: The Energy Industry, Political Censorship, and Free Speech (2017)
By Jeffrey A. Lockwood. Published by The University of New Mexico PressExploring censorship imposed by corporate wealth and power, this book focuses on the energy industry in Wyoming, where coal, oil, and gas are pillars of the economy. The author examines how governmental bodies and public institutions have suppressed the expression of ideas that conflict with the financial interests of those who profit from fossil fuels. He reveals the ways in which university administrations, art museums, education boards, and research institutes have been coerced into destroying artwork, abandoning studies, modifying curricula, and firing employees. Providing more of the nation’s energy than any other state, Wyoming illuminates the conflicts in the American West, especially the conflict between private wealth and free speech.Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction
By Michelle Nijhuis. Published by W. W. Norton & CompanyIn the late nineteenth century, humans came at long last to a devastating realization: their rapidly industrializing and globalizing societies were driving scores of animal species to extinction. In Beloved Beasts, acclaimed science journalist Michelle Nijhuis traces the history of the movement to protect and conserve other forms of life. From early battles to save charismatic species such as the American bison and bald eagle to today’s global effort to defend life on a larger scale, Nijhuis’s “spirited and engaging” account documents “the changes of heart that changed history” (Dan Cryer, Boston Globe).Building the Cycling City: The Dutch Blueprint for Urban Vitality (2018)
By Melissa Bruntlett and Chris Bruntlett. Published by The University of New Mexico PressIn car-clogged urban areas across the world, the humble bicycle is enjoying a second life as a legitimate form of transportation. As the world’s foremost cycling nation, the Netherlands is the only country where the number of bikes exceeds the number of people, primarily because the Dutch have built a cycling culture accessible to everyone, regardless of age, ability, or economic means.Burn Out: The End Game for Fossil Fuels (2017)
By Dieter Helm. Published by The University of New Mexico PressLow oil prices are sending shockwaves through the global economy, and longtime industry observer Dieter Helm explains how this and other shifts are the harbingers of a coming energy revolution. Helm documents how the global move toward the internet-of-things will inexorably reduce the demand for oil, gas, and renewables – and prove more effective than current efforts to avert climate change. Oil companies and energy utilities must adapt or face future irrelevancy. Oil-exporting nations will be negatively impacted, whereas the U.S. and Europe, investors in the new technologies, may find themselves leaders in the geopolitical game. Helm concludes by offering advice on what can and should be done to prepare for a radically different energy future.Can I Recycle This? A Guide to Better Recycling and How to Reduce Single Use Plastics
By Jennie Romer and Christie Young Published by Penguin BooksSince the dawn of the recycling system, men and women the world over have stood by their bins, holding an everyday object, wondering, "can I recycle this?" This simple question reaches into our concern for the environment, the care we take to keep our homes and our communities clean, and how we interact with our local government. Recycling rules seem to differ in every municipality, with exceptions and caveats at every turn, leaving the average American scratching her head at the simple act of throwing something away.Carbon Democracy: Political Power in the Age of Oil (2011)
By Timothy Mitchell. Published by Verso BooksIn this magisterial study, Timothy Mitchell rethinks the history of energy, bringing into his grasp as he does so environmental politics, the struggle for democracy, and the place of the Middle East in the modern world. With the rise of coal power, the producers who oversaw its production acquired the ability to shut down energy systems, a threat they used to build the first mass democracies.Carbon Nation: Fossil Fuels in the Making of American Culture (2015)
By Bob Johnson. Published by The University of New Mexico PressCarbon 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. In Carbon Nation, Bob Johnson reminds us that what we take to be natural in the modern world is, in fact, historical, and that our history and culture arise from this relatively recent embrace of the coal mine, the stoke hole, and the oil derrick.Carbon Shock: A Tale of Risk and Calculus on the Front Lines of the Disrupted Global Economy: How Carbon Is Changing the Cost of Everything (2011)
By Mark Schapiro. Published by The University of New Mexico PressIn Carbon Shock, veteran journalist Mark Schapiro takes readers on a journey into a world where the same chaotic forces reshaping our natural world are also transforming the economy, playing havoc with corporate calculations, shifting economic and political power, and upending our understanding of the real risks, costs, and possibilities of what lies ahead. Carbon Shock evokes a world in which the parameters of our understanding are shifting – on a scale even more monumental than how the digital revolution transformed financial decision-making – toward a slow but steady acknowledgement of the costs and consequences of climate change. It also offers a critical new perspective as global leaders gear up for the next round of climate talks in 2015.Changing Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do About It (2011)
By Paul R. Epstein, MD and Dan Ferber. Published by The University of New Mexico PressWritten by a physician and a climate and health expert, this book takes readers from Mozambique to Honduras to the US for an in depth look at how climate change is affecting patterns of diseases. It also “delivers a suite of innovative solutions for shaping healthy global economic order in the twenty-first century” - Yale Climate ConnectionsClean Disruption of Energy and Transportation: How Silicon Valley will make Oil, Nuclear, Natural Gas, Coal, Electric Utilities and Conventional Cars Obsolete by 2030 (2014)
By Tony Seba. Published by The University of New Mexico PressThe industrial age of energy and transportation is already giving way to an information technology and knowledge-based energy and transportation era.Climate Change: What Everyone Needs to Know (2015)
By Joe Romm. Published by The University of New Mexico PressClimate change will have a bigger impact on humanity than the Internet has had. The last decade's spate of super storms, wildfires, heat waves, and droughts has accelerated the public discourse on this topic and lent credence to climatologist Lonnie Thomson's 2010 statement that climate change "represents a clear and present danger to civilization." In June 2015, the Pope declared that action on climate change is a moral issue.Climate Leviathan: A Political Theory of our Planetary Future (2018)
By Joel Wainwright, Geoff Mann. Published by The University of New Mexico PressHow climate change will affect our political theory--for better and worse. Despite the science and the summits, leading capitalist states have not achieved anything close to an adequate level of carbon mitigation. There is now simply no way to prevent the planet breaching the threshold of two degrees Celsius set by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. What are the likely political and economic outcomes of this? Where is the overheating world heading?Climatology versus Pseudoscience: Exposing the Failed Predictions of Global Warming Skeptics (2015)
By Dana Nuccitelli. Published by The University of New Mexico PressThis book explains the science of climate change in plain language and shows that the 2 to 4 percent of climate scientists who are skeptical that humans are the main cause of global warming are a fringe minority―and have a well-established history of being wrong.Consuming Power: A Social History of American Energies (2018)
By David E. Nye. Published by The University of New Mexico PressNye uses energy as a touchstone to examine the lives of ordinary people engaged in normal activities.. He looks at how these activities changed as new energy systems were constructed, from colonial times to recent years. He also shows how, as they incorporated new machines and processes into their lives, Americans became ensnared in power systems that were not easily changed: they made choices about the conduct of their lives, and those choices accumulated to produce a consuming culture.Dark Side of the Ocean: The Destruction of Our Seas, Why It Matters, and What We Can Do About It
By Albert Bates. Published by GroundSwell Books"Ocean biodiversity is being decimated on par with the fastest rates of rain forest destruction. More than 80 percent of pollutants in the oceans come from sewage and other land-based runoff (some of it radioactive). The rest is created by waste dumped by commercial and recreational vessels. In many areas and for many fish stocks, there are no conservation or management measures existing or even planned.Designing Climate Solutions: A Policy Guide for Low-Carbon Energy (2018)⭐
By Hal Harvey. Published by The University of New Mexico PressWith the effects of climate change already upon us, the need to cut global greenhouse gas emissions is nothing less than urgent. It’s a daunting challenge, but the technologies and strategies to meet it exist today. A small set of energy policies, designed and implemented well, can put us on the path to a low carbon future. Energy systems are large and complex, so energy policy must be focused and cost-effective. One-size-fits-all approaches simply won’t get the job done. Policymakers need a clear, comprehensive resource that outlines the energy policies that will have the biggest impact on our climate future, and describes how to design these policies well.Dire Predictions: Understanding Climate Change (2015)
By Michael E Mann and Lee R Crump. Published by The University of New Mexico PressExplore global warming with graphics, illustrations, and charts that separate climate change fact from fiction, presenting the truth about global warming in a way that's both accurate and easy to understand. Respected climate scientists Michael E. Mann and Lee R. Kump address important questions about global warming and climate change, diving into the information documented by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) and breaking it down into clear graphics that explain complex climate questions in simple illustrations that present the truth of the global warming problem clearly.Discerning Experts: The Practices of Scientific Assessment for Environmental Policy (2019)
By Michael Oppenheimer, Naomi Oreskes and others. Published by The University of Chicago PressDiscerning Experts assesses the assessments that many governments rely on to help guide environmental policy and action. Through their close look at environmental assessments involving acid rain, ozone depletion, and sea level rise, the authors explore how experts deliberate and decide on the scientific facts about problems like climate change. They also seek to understand how the scientists involved make the judgments they do, how the organization and management of assessment activities affects those judgments, and how expertise is identified and constructed.
Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist (2017)
By Kate Raworth. Published by The University of New Mexico PressHumanity’s 21st century challenge is to meet the needs of all within the means of the planet. In other words, to ensure that no one falls short on life’s essentials (from food and housing to healthcare and political voice), while ensuring that collectively we do not overshoot our pressure on Earth’s life-supporting systems, on which we fundamentally depend – such as a stable climate, fertile soils, and a protective ozone layer. The Doughnut of social and planetary boundaries is a playfully serious approach to framing that challenge, and it acts as a compass for human progress this century.Energy and Civilization (2017)
By Vaclav Smil. Published by The MIT PressEnergy is the only universal currency; it is necessary for getting anything done. Humans have come to rely on many different energy flows – ranging from fossil fuels to photovoltaic generation of electricity – for their civilized existence. In this monumental history, Vaclav Smil provides a comprehensive account of how energy has shaped society, from pre-agricultural foraging societies through today’s fossil fuel–driven civilization. This book is an extensively updated and expanded version of Smil’s Energy in World History (1994). Smil has incorporated an enormous amount of new material, reflecting the dramatic developments in energy studies over the last two decades and his own research over that time.Energy and Society: an Introduction (2014)
By Harold Schobert. Published by CRC PressEnergy and Society: An Introduction, Second Edition provides readers with a detailed introduction to energy sources and energy utilization. This book presents an overview of alternative energy issues and technologies, discusses the pros and cons of various energy sources, and explores their impacts on society and the environment.Energy without Conscience: Oil, Climate Change, and Complicity (2017)
By David McDermott Hughes. Published by Duke University Press BooksIn Energy without Conscience David McDermott Hughes investigates why climate change has yet to be seen as a moral issue. Hughes centers his analysis on Trinidad and Tobago, which is the world’s oldest petro-state, having drilled the first continuously producing oil well in 1866. He draws parallels between Trinidad’s eighteenth- and nineteenth-century slave labor energy economy and its contemporary oil industry. Hughes argues that like slavery, producing oil is a moral choice and that oil is at its most dangerous when it is accepted as part of everyday life. Only by rejecting arguments that oil is economically and politically necessary, and by acknowledging our complicity in an immoral system, can we stem the damage being done to the planet.Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and the Crisis of the Earth System (2016)
By Ian Angus. Published by Monthly Review PressScience 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.Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out? (2019) ⭐
By Bill McKibben. Published by Henry Holt and Co.A daring call to action, exposing the reality of how humankind has aided in the destruction of our planet and groundbreaking information on what you can do now. Read book reviews at The New York Times and Resilience.Fatal Isolation: The Devastating Paris Heat Wave of 2003 (2015)
By Richard Keller. Published by University of Chicago PressParis’s 2003 heat wave was the worst natural disaster in the city’s history and took 1500 lives. In Fatal Isolation, Keller weaves the stories of its victims and the crisis itself to explore how a city responds to disaster and rapid change.Fevered: Why A Hotter Planet Will Hurt Our Health– and How We Can Save Ourselves (2013)
By Linda Marsa. Published by Rodale BooksAward winning journalist Linda Marsa details the sweeping effects of climate change on global health trends and details the imminent danger of persistently rising temperatures. Exploring changes in Earth’s increasingly fragile system, she argues why attending to new health issues will be of primary importance if human societies are to survive the coming century.Food Fights: How History Matters to Contemporary Food Debates
By Charles C. Ludington and Matthew Morse Booker. Published by University of North Carolina PressWhat we eat, where it is from, and how it is produced are vital questions in today's America. We think seriously about food because it is freighted with the hopes, fears, and anxieties of modern life. Yet critiques of food and food systems all too often sprawl into jeremiads against modernity itself, while supporters of the status quo refuse to acknowledge the problems with today's methods of food production and distribution.Grass, Soil, Hope: A Journey Through Carbon Country (2014)
By Courtney White. Foreword by Michael Pollan. Published by Chelsea Green PublishingWhat can we do about climate change, global hunger, water scarcity, environmental stress, and economic instability? The farmers and ranchers say: Build topsoil. Fix creeks. Eat meat from pasture-raised animals. Scientists maintain that a mere 2 percent increase in the carbon content of the planet’s soils could offset 100 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions going into the atmosphere.Growing a Revolution: Bringing Our Soil Back to Life (2017)⭐
By David Wallace-Wells. Published by Tim Duggan BooksThe problem of agriculture is as old as civilization. Throughout history, great societies that abused their land withered into poverty or disappeared entirely. Now we risk repeating this ancient story on a global scale due to ongoing soil degradation, a changing climate, and a rising population. But there is reason for hope. David R. Montgomery introduces us to farmers around the world at the heart of a brewing soil health revolution that could bring humanity’s ailing soil back to life remarkably fast. Growing a Revolution draws on visits to farms in the industrialized world and developing world to show that a new combination of farming practices can deliver innovative, cost-effective solutions to problems farmers face today. Read a book review on Resilience.Heat Advisory: Protecting Health On a Warming Planet (2016)
By Alan H. Lockwood, MD. Published by MIT PressDrawing on peer reviewed scientific and medical research, Lockwood examines climate change’s effects on Earth’s ecosystems, making direct connections to threats to human health.Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago (2015)
By Eric Klinenberg. Published by University of Chicago PressKlinenberg studies the social, economic, and political systems at work in Chicago in 1995 to reveal why that year’s heat wave was so devastating, giving warning on the preparedness of our cities to meet future skyrocketing temperatures.High Tide On Main Street: Rising Sea Level and the Coming Coastal Crisis (2012)
By John Englander. Published by The Science BookshelfDid you know that... Sea level will rise for at least 1,000 years. Shorelines will shift significantly by 2050 Property values may start to decline this decade. Rising sea level is the most profound long-term aspect of climate change.How to Be Animal: A New History of What It Means to Be Human
By Melanie Challenger. Published by Penguin BooksHow to Be Animal tells a remarkable story of what it means to be human and argues that at the heart of our existence is a profound struggle with being animal. We possess a psychology that seeks separation between humanity and the rest of nature, and we have invented grand ideologies to magnify this. As well as piecing together the mystery of how this mindset evolved, Challenger's book examines the wide-reaching ways in which it affects our lives, from our politics to the way we distance ourselves from other species. We travel from the origin of homo sapiens through the agrarian and industrial revolutions, the age of the internet, and on to the futures of AI and human-machine interface. Challenger examines how technology influences our sense of our own animal nature and our relationship with other species with whom we share this fragile planet.Implementing a U.S. Carbon Tax: Challenges and Debates (2015)
By Ian Parry, Adele Morris and Roberton C. Williams III. Published by Routledge Explorations in Environmental EconomicsAlthough the future extent and effects of global climate change remain uncertain, the expected damages are not zero, and risks of serious environmental and macroeconomic consequences rise with increasing atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. Despite the uncertainties, reducing emissions now makes sense, and a carbon tax is the simplest, most effective, and least costly way to do this. At the same time, a carbon tax would provide substantial new revenues which may be badly needed, given historically high debt-to-GDP levels, pressures on social security and medical budgets, and calls to reform taxes on personal and corporate income.Kochland: The Secret History of Koch Industries and Corporate Power in America (2019)
By Christopher Leonard. Published by Simon & SchusterJust as Steve Coll told the story of globalization through ExxonMobil and Andrew Ross Sorkin told the story of Wall Street excess through Too Big to Fail, Christopher Leonard’s Kochland uses the extraordinary account of how one of the biggest private companies in the world grew to be that big to tell the story of modern corporate America.Legal Pathways to Deep Decarbonization in the United States (2018)
By Michael B. Gerrard and John C. Dernbach. Published by Environmental Law InstituteLegal Pathways is based on two reports by the Deep Decarbonization Pathways Project (DDPP) that explain technical and policy pathways for reducing U.S. greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 80% from 1990 levels by 2050. This 80x50 target and similarly aggressive carbon abatement goals are often referred to as deep decarbonization, distinguished because it requires systemic changes to the energy economy. Using these technical and policy pathways, Legal Pathways provides a legal playbook for deep decarbonization in the United States, identifying well over 1,000 legal options for enabling the United States to address one of the greatest problems facing this country and the rest of humanity.Light of the Stars: Alien Worlds and the Fate of the Earth (2018)
By Adam Frank. Published by W.W. Norton & CompanyLight of the Stars tells the story of humanity’s coming of age as we awaken to the possibilities of life on other worlds and their sudden relevance to our fate on Earth. Astrophysicist Adam Frank traces the question of alien life and intelligence from the ancient Greeks to the leading thinkers of our own time, and shows how we as a civilization can only hope to survive climate change if we recognize what science has recently discovered: that we are just one of ten billion trillion planets in the Universe, and it’s highly likely that many of those planets hosted technologically advanced alien civilizations. What’s more, each of those civilizations must have faced the same challenge of civilization-driven climate change. “A valuable perspective on the most important problem of our time.” - Adam Becker, NPRLosing Earth: A Recent History (2019)
By Nathaniel Rich. Published by Tim Duggan BooksBy 1979, we knew nearly everything we understand today about climate change―including how to stop it. Over the next decade, a handful of scientists, politicians, and strategists, led by two unlikely heroes, risked their careers in a desperate, escalating campaign to convince the world to act before it was too late. Losing Earth is their story, and ours. Read The New York Times book review.Merchants of Doubt (2011)
By Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway. Published by Bloomsbury PressThe U.S. scientific community has long led the world in research on such areas as public health, environmental science, and issues affecting quality of life. Our scientists have produced landmark studies on the dangers of DDT, tobacco smoke, acid rain, and global warming. But at the same time, a small yet potent subset of this community leads the world in vehement denial of these dangers.Moving to Higher Ground: Rising Sea Level and the Path Forward (2021)
By John Englander. Published by The Science BookshelfRising sea level will be tomorrow's global economic and humanitarian crisis if we don't start adapting now. Around the world, rising sea level threatens coastal communities. It is unstoppable, requiring bold planning to avoid catastrophe. Though often seen as an environmental issue, it's more about our security and economy and the impacts on our homes and communities. In his previous book, the bestselling High Tide on Main Street: Rising Sea Level and the Coming Coastal Crisis, renowned oceanographer John Englander clearly explained the science. In Moving to Higher Ground: Rising Sea Level and the Path Forward, he updates the latest scientific information and presents a visionary outlook for what we need to do showing the world how to survive, and even thrive, for ourselves and future generations. Englander explains: Why sea level will rise regardless of efforts to reduce CO2 emissions. How high the sea could rise in the coming decades and the effects on assets and infrastructure. What you need to know to prepare and adapt for long-term sea level rise and short term flooding events. Why rising sea level and the massive adaptation required could be the greatest economic engine of this century.Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution (2000)
By Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and L. Hunter Lovins. Published by US Green Building CouncilIn this groundbreaking blueprint for a new economy, three leading business visionaries explain how the world is on the verge of a new industrial revolution-one that promises to transform our fundamental notions about commerce and its role in shaping our future. Natural Capitalism describes a future in which business and environmental interests increasingly overlap, and in which businesses can better satisfy their customers' needs, increase profits, and help solve environmental problems all at the same time.No Good Alternative, Volume 2 of Carbon Ideologies (2018)
By William T. Vollmann. Published by VikingThe second volume of William T. Vollmann’s epic book about the factors and human actions that have led to global warming begins in the coal fields of West Virginia and Eastern Kentucky, where “America’s best friend” is not merely a fuel, but a “heritage.” Over the course of four years Vollmann finds hollowed out towns with coal-polluted streams and acidified drinking water; makes covert visits to mountaintop removal mines; and offers documented accounts of unpaid fines for federal health and safety violations and of miners who died because their bosses cut corners to make more money.No Immediate Danger, Volume 1 of Carbon Ideologies (2018)
By William T. Vollmann. Published by VikingVollmann turns to a topic that will define the generations to come–the factors and human actions that have led to global warming. Vollmann begins No Immediate Danger, the first volume of Carbon Ideologies, by examining and quantifying the many causes of climate change, from industrial manufacturing and agricultural practices to fossil fuel extraction, economic demand for electric power, and the justifiable yearning of people all over the world to live in comfort. Turning to nuclear power first, Vollmann then recounts multiple visits that he made at significant personal risk over the course of seven years to the contaminated no-go zones and sad ghost towns of Fukushima, Japan, beginning shortly after the tsunami and reactor meltdowns of 2011. Equipped first only with a dosimeter and then with a scintillation counter, he measured radiation and interviewed tsunami victims, nuclear evacuees, anti-nuclear organizers and pro-nuclear utility workers.Ocean Speaks: How Marie Tharp Revealed the Ocean’s Biggest Secret
By Jess Keating. Published by Tundra BooksMeet Marie Tharp (1920-2006), the first person to map the Earth's underwater mountain ridge, in this inspiring picture book biography from the author of Shark Lady. From a young age, Marie Tharp loved watching the world. She loved solving problems. And she loved pushing the limits of what girls and women were expected to do and be. In the mid-twentieth century, women were not welcome in the sciences, but Marie was tenacious. She got a job at a laboratory in NewOil, Power, and War: A Dark History (2018)
By Matthieu Auzanneau. Published by Chelsea Green Publishing CompanyIn this sweeping, unabashed history of oil, Matthieu Auzanneau takes a fresh, thought-provoking look at the way oil interests have commandeered politics and economies, changed cultures, disrupted power balances across the globe, and spawned wars. He upends commonly held assumptions about key political and financial events of the past 150 years, and he sheds light on what our oil-constrained and eventually post-oil future might look like.Our Changing Menu: Climate Change and the Foods We Love and Need (2021)
By Michael P. Hoffmann and Carrie Koplinka-Loehr. Published by Comstock Publishing AssociatesOur Changing Menu unpacks the increasingly complex relationships between food and climate change. Whether you're a chef, baker, distiller, restaurateur, or someone who simply enjoys a good pizza or drink, it's time to come to terms with how climate change is affecting our diverse and interwoven food system.Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (2009)
By Lester Brown. Published by W.W. Norton & CompanyAs fossil fuel prices rise, oil insecurity deepens, and concerns about climate change cast a shadow over the future of coal, a new energy economy is emerging. Wind, solar, and geothermal energy are replacing oil, coal, and natural gas, at a pace and on a scale we could not have imagined even a year ago. For the first time since the Industrial Revolution, we have begun investing in energy sources that can last forever. Plan B 4.0 explores both the nature of this transition to a new energy economy and how it will affect our daily lives.Plastic Free: The Inspiring Story of a Global Environmental Movement and Why It Matters
By Rebecca Prince-Ruiz and Joanna Atherfold Finn. Published by Columbia University PressIn July 2011, Rebecca Prince-Ruiz challenged herself to go plastic free for the whole month. Starting with a small group of people in the city of Perth, the Plastic Free July movement has grown into a 250-million strong community across 177 countries, empowering people to reduce single-use plastic consumption and create a cleaner future.Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman (2017) ⭐
By Mariam Horn. Published by W.W. Norton & CompanyUnfolding as a journey down the Mississippi River, Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman tells the stories of five representatives of this stewardship movement: a Montana rancher, a Kansas farmer, a Mississippi river man, a Louisiana shrimper, and a Gulf fisherman. In exploring their work and family histories and the essential geographies they protect, Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman challenges pervasive and powerful myths about American and environmental values.Resilience for All: Striving for Equity Through Community-Driven Design (2018)
By Barbara Brown Wilson. Published by Island PressIn the United States, people of color are disproportionately more likely to live in environments with poor air quality, in close proximity to toxic waste, and in locations more vulnerable to climate change and extreme weather events. In many vulnerable neighborhoods, structural racism and classism prevent residents from having a seat at the table when decisions are made about their community. In an effort to overcome power imbalances and ensure local knowledge informs decision-making, a new approach to community engagement is essential.Science as a Contact Sport: Inside the Battle to Save Earth’s Climate (2009) ⭐
By Stephen H. Schneider. Published by National GeographicWe’ve known about global warming for four decades, so why has it taken so long for the world to agree on effective action. Schneider, part of the Nobel Prize–winning team that shared the accolade with Al Gore in 2007, had a front-row seat at this unfolding environmental meltdown. The answers are both simple and complicated. “Stephen Schneider is masterful at translating enormously complex scientific principles into a language that we can all comprehend.”--Robert RedfordScience on a Mission: How Military Funding Shaped What We Do and Don’t Know about the Ocean
By Naomi Oreskes. Published by University of Chicago PressSome might say none. If scientists seek to discover fundamental truths about the world, and they do so in an objective manner using well-established methods, then how could it matter who’s footing the bill? History, however, suggests otherwise. In science, as elsewhere, money is power. Tracing the recent history of oceanography, Naomi Oreskes discloses dramatic changes in American ocean science since the Cold War, uncovering how and why it changed. Much of it has to do with who pays.Silvopasture: A Guide to Managing Grazing Animals, Forage Crops, and Trees in a Temperate Farm Ecosystem (2018)
By Steve Gabriel. Published by Chelsea Green PublishingA system for regenerating land, storing carbon, and creating climate resilience. The concept of silvopasture challenges our notions of both modern agriculture and land use. For centuries, European settlers of North America have engaged in practices that separate the field from the forest, and even the food from the animal. Silvopasture systems integrate trees, animals, and forages in a whole-system approach that offers a number of benefits to the farmer and the environment. Such a system not only offers the promise of ecological regeneration of the land, but also an economical livelihood and even the ability to farm extensively while buffering the effects of a changing climate: increased rainfall, longer droughts, and more intense storm events.Snake Oil: How Fracking’s False Promise of Plenty Imperils Our Future (2014)
By Richard Heinberg. Published by Clairview BooksThe rapid spread of hydraulic fracturing ("fracking") has temporarily boosted US natural gas and oil production... and sparked a massive environmental backlash in communities across the country. The fossil fuel industry is trying to sell fracking as the biggest energy development of the century, with slick promises of American energy independence and benefits to local economies. SNAKE OIL casts a critical eye on the oil-industry hype that has hijacked America's energy conversation. This is the first book to look at fracking from both economic and environmental perspectives, informed by the most thorough analysis of shale gas and oil drilling data ever undertaken. Is fracking the miracle cure-all to our energy ills, or a costly distraction from the necessary work of reducing our fossil fuel dependence?Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming Climate Catastrophe and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity (2010)
By James Hansen. Published by Bloomsbury USAIn his Q&A with Bill McKibben featured in the paperback edition, Dr. James Hansen-the nation's leading scientist on climate issues-speaks out for the first time with the full truth about global warming: The planet is hurtling even more rapidly than previously acknowledged to a climatic point of no return.Taming the Sun: Innovations to Harness Solar Energy and Power the Planet (2018)
By Varun Sivaram. Published by MIT PressSolar energy, once a niche application for a limited market, has become the cheapest and fastest-growing power source on earth. What's more, its potential is nearly limitless―every hour the sun beams down more energy than the world uses in a year. But in Taming the Sun, energy expert Varun Sivaram warns that the world is not yet equipped to harness erratic sunshine to meet most of its energy needs. And if solar's current surge peters out, prospects for replacing fossil fuels and averting catastrophic climate change will dim.The Carbon Crunch: How We’re Getting Climate Change Wrong – And How to Fix It (2015)
By Dieter Helm. Published by The University of New Mexico PressIn a new edition of his hard-hitting book on climate change, economist Dieter Helm looks at how and why we have failed to tackle the issue of global warming and argues for a new, pragmatic rethinking of energy policy.The Carbon Farming Solution: A Global Toolkit of Perennial Crops and Regenerative Agriculture Practices for Climate Change Mitigation and Food Security (2016)
By Eric Toensmeier. Published by Chelsea Green PublishingAgriculture is rightly blamed as a major culprit of our climate crisis. But in this groundbreaking new book, Eric Toensmeier argues that agriculture―specifically, the subset of practices known as “carbon farming”―can, and should be, a linchpin of a global climate solutions platform.The Carbon Footprint Wars: What Might Happen If We Retreat From Globalization? (2009)
By Stuart Sim. Published by Edinburgh University PressClimate change is acknowledged to be the major problem currently facing the human race, and the need to reduce our carbon footprint becomes ever more urgent as the scientific predictions of the effects of climate change become increasingly dire. Whether we are fully aware of the social and political consequences of striving for a significant reduction is more questionable. The Carbon Footprint Wars identifies the many dangers inherent in the projected solutions - such as retreating from the spread of globalization, the current socio-economic paradigm for world trade. The war of words that is being waged over the appropriate way to deal with our collective carbon footprint has critical implications for us all.The Case for a Climate Tax (2011)
By Dr. Shi-Ling Hsu. Published by The University of New Mexico PressThere's a simple, straightforward way to cut carbon emissions and prevent the most disastrous effects of climate change-and we're rejecting it because of irrational political fears. That's the central argument of The Case for a Carbon Tax, a clear-eyed, sophisticated analysis of climate change policy.The Climate Diet: 50 Simple Ways to Trim Your Carbon Footprint (2021)
By Paul Greenberg. Published by Penguin AudioWe all understand just how dire the circumstances facing our planet are and that we all need to do our part to stem the tide of climate change. When we look in the mirror, we can admit that we desperately need to go on a climate diet. But the task of cutting down our carbon emissions feels overwhelming and the discipline required hard to summon. With The Climate Diet, award-winning food and environmental writer Paul Greenberg offers us the practical, accessible guide we all need.The Climate Report (2019)
By The U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP). Published by Melville HouseTo hide its dramatic findings, the government released its mandated Climate Assessment Report on Black Friday while everyone was out shopping. Melville House rushed the report into print—including all its charts, graphs, and illustrations—to broadcast its meticulous and devastating findings about the causes and impact of global warming.The Coming Storm (2018)
By Michael Lewis. Published by Audible StudiosTornadoes, cyclones, tsunamis... Weather can be deadly - especially when it strikes without warning. Millions of Americans could soon find themselves at the mercy of violent weather if the public data behind lifesaving storm alerts gets privatized for personal gain. In his first Audible Original feature, New York Times best-selling author and journalist Michael Lewis delivers hard-hitting research on not-so-random weather data - and how Washington plans to release it. He also digs deep into the lives of two scientists who revolutionized climate predictions, bringing warning systems to previously unimaginable levels of accuracy. One is Kathy Sullivan, a gifted scientist among the first women in space; the other, D.J. Patil, is a trickster-turned-mathematician and a political adviser. Most urgently, Lewis's narrative reveals the potential cost of putting a price tag on information with the potential to save lives, raising questions about balancing public service with profits in an ethically-ambiguous atmosphere.The Community Resilience Reader: Essential Resources for an Era of Upheaval (2017)
By Daniel Lerch. Published by The University of New Mexico PressNational and global efforts have failed to stop climate change, transition our society from fossil fuels, and reduce inequality. We must now confront these and other challenges by building resilience at the level of communities. The Community Resilience Reader: Essential Resources for an Era of Upheaval (Island Press, 2017) combines a fresh look at the crises humanity faces, the essential tools of resilience science, and the wisdom of activists, scholars, and analysts working on the ground. From the producers of the award-winning The Post Carbon Reader (Watershed Media, 2010), The Community Resilience Reader is a valuable resource for community leaders, students, and concerned citizens.The End of Nature (2006)
By Bill McKibben. Published by Random HouseReissued on the tenth anniversary of its publication, this classic work on our environmental crisis features a new introduction by the author, reviewing both the progress and ground lost in the fight to save the earth.The End of the Ocean: A Novel (2020)
By Maja Lunde. Published by HarperViaFrom the author of the number-one international bestseller The History of Bees, a captivating story of the power of nature and the human spirit that explores the threat of a devastating worldwide drought, witnessed through the lives of a father, a daughter, and a woman who will risk her life to save the future.The Geography of Risk: Epic Storms, Rising Seas, and the Cost of America’s Coasts (2019)
By Gilbert M. Gaul Published by PublicAffairsConsider this: Five of the most expensive hurricanes in history have made landfall since 2005: Katrina ($160 billion), Ike ($40 billion), Sandy ($72 billion), Harvey ($125 billion), and Maria ($90 billion). With more property than ever in harm’s way, and the planet and oceans warming dangerously, it won’t be long before we see a $250 billion hurricane. Why? Because Americans have built $3 trillion worth of property in some of the riskiest places on earth: barrier islands and coastal floodplains. And they have been encouraged to do so by what Gilbert M. Gaul reveals in The Geography of Risk to be a confounding array of federal subsidies, tax breaks, low-interest loans, grants, and government flood insurance that shift the risk of life at the beach from private investors to public taxpayers, radically distorting common notions of risk.The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable (2017) ⭐
By Amitav Ghosh. Published by University of Chicago PressAre we deranged? The acclaimed Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh argues that future generations may well think so. How else to explain our imaginative failure in the face of global warming? In his first major book of nonfiction since In an Antique Land, Ghosh examines our inability—at the level of literature, history, and politics—to grasp the scale and violence of climate change.The Great Quake (2017)
By Henry Fountain. Published by CrownIn the bestselling tradition of Erik Larson’s Isaac’s Storm, The Great Quake is a riveting narrative about the biggest earthquake in North American recorded history -- the 1964 Alaska earthquake that demolished the city of Valdez and swept away the island village of Chenega -- and the geologist who hunted for clues to explain how and why it took place.The History of Bees: A Novel (2018)
By Maja Lunde. Published by Atria Books“Imagine The Leftovers, but with honey” (Elle), and in the spirit of Station Eleven and Never Let Me Go, this “spectacular and deeply moving” (Lisa See, New York Times bestselling author) novel follows three generations of beekeepers from the past, present, and future, weaving a spellbinding story of their relationship to the bees—and to their children and one another—against the backdrop of an urgent, global crisis.The Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health In the US (2005)
By US Global Research Program. Published by Nature Publishing GroupThis assessment provides definitive descriptions of climate-related health issues within the US and analyzes the connection between them and socioeconomic systems.The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World (2016)
By Andrea Wulf Published by VintageThe acclaimed author of Founding Gardeners reveals the forgotten life of Alexander von Humboldt, the visionary German naturalist whose ideas changed the way we see the natural world—and in the process created modern environmentalism.The Last Hours of Humanity: Warming the World to Extinction (2013)
By Thom Hartmann. Published by Waterfront Digital ExperienceThis book, The Last Hours of Humanity, goes where far too few researchers have been willing to go, which is addressing global warming not as an economic or political problem, but as a geological problem that threatens the survival of every living thing on the planet, including us humans.The Madhouse Effect: How Climate Change Denial Is Threatening Our Planet, Destroying Our Politics, and Driving Us Crazy (2016) ⭐
By Michael Mann and Tom Toles. Published by Columbia University PressThe award winning climate scientist Michael E. Mann and the Pulitzer Prize–winning political cartoonist Tom Toles have fought at the frontlines of climate denialism for most of their careers. They have witnessed the manipulation of the media by business and political interests and the unconscionable play to partisanship on issues that affect the well-being of millions. The lessons they have learned have been invaluable, inspiring this brilliant, colorful escape hatch from the madhouse of the climate wars.The Ministry for the Future: A Novel (2020)
By Kim Stanley Robinson. Published by OrbitThe 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.The Moth Snowstorm: Nature & Joy (2015)
By Michael McCarthy. Published by New York Review of BooksUnlike any other book on climate change, McCarthy traces his adoration of the natural world from when he was seven, goes on to record the rapid dissolution of nature’s abundance and then proposes a passionate call to action.The Myth Gap (2017)
By Alex Evans. Published by Transworld PressOnce upon a time our society was rich in stories. They united us and helped us to understand the world and ourselves. We called them myths. Today, we have a myth gap. Does that matter? Alex Evans argues powerfully and persuasively that it does. In this time of global crisis and transition - mass migration, inequality, resource scarcity, and climate change - it is only by finding new myths, those that speak to us of renewal and restoration, that we will navigate our way to a better future. It is stories, rather than facts and pie charts, which have the power to animate us and bring us together in to change the world. Drawing on his first-hand experience as a political adviser within British government and at the United Nations, and examining the history of climate change campaigning and recent contests such as Brexit and the US presidential election, Alex Evans explores: how tomorrow's activists are using narratives for change, how modern stories have been used and abused, where we might find the right myths that will take us from a dark age of uncertainty towards the broad, sunlit uplands that we all seek.The Overstory: A Novel (2018)⭐
By Richard Powers. Published by W.W. Norton & CompanyIn his twelfth novel, National Book Award winner Richard Powers delivers a sweeping, impassioned novel of activism and resistance that is also a stunning evocation of―and paean to―the natural world. From the roots to the crown and back to the seeds, The Overstory unfolds in concentric rings of interlocking fables that range from antebellum New York to the late twentieth-century Timber Wars of the Pacific Northwest and beyond, exploring the essential conflict on this planet: the one taking place between humans and nonhumans. There is a world alongside ours―vast, slow, interconnected, resourceful, magnificently inventive, and almost invisible to us. This is the story of a handful of people who learn how to see that world and who are drawn up into its unfolding catastrophe.The Planter of Modern Life: Louis Bromfield and the Seeds of a Food Revolution (2020)
By Stephen Heyman. Published by W. W. Norton & CompanyLouis Bromfield was a World War I ambulance driver, a Paris expat, and a Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist as famous in the 1920s as Hemingway or Fitzgerald. But he cashed in his literary success to finance a wild agrarian dream in his native Ohio. The ideas he planted at his utopian experimental farm, Malabar, would inspire America’s first generation of organic farmers and popularize the tenets of environmentalism years before Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring.The Psychology of Climate Change (2018)
By Geoffrey Beattie and Laura McGuire. Published by RoutledgeWhat explains our attitudes towards the environment? Why do so many climate change initiatives fail? How can we do more to prevent humans damaging the environment? The Psychology of Climate Change explores the evidence for our changing environment, and suggests that there are significant cognitive biases in how we think about, and act on climate change. The authors examine how organisations have attempted to mobilise the public in the fight against climate change, but these initiatives have often failed due to the public’s unwillingness to adapt their behaviour. The book also explores why some people deny climate change altogether, and the influence that these climate change deniers can have on global action to mitigate further damage.The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World (2011)
By Daniel Yergin. Published by Penguin Random HouseIn The Quest, Yergin shows how energy is an engine of global political and economic change and conflict, examining both the energies on which our civilization has been built and the new energies that are competing to replace them. Yergin explains how climate change became a critical issue and leads readers through the rebirth of renewable energies, energy independence, and the return of the electric car. Epic in scope and never moretimely, The Quest vividly reveals the technologies, individuals, and decisions that are shaping our future.The Sweetness of a Simple Life: Tips for Healthier, Happier and Kinder Living from a Visionary Natural Scientist (2015)
By Diana Beresford-Kroeger. Published by Vintage CanadaIn The Sweetness of a Simple Life, Diana Beresford-Kroeger mixes science with storytelling, wonderment, magic, myth and plenty of common sense. Orphaned at an early age, Beresford-Kroeger was tutored by elderly relatives in Ireland in the Druidic tradition, taught the overlap between the arts and sciences, and the triad of body, mind and spirit. After pursuing a Ph.D. in medical biochemistry, Beresford-Kroeger set out on a quest to preserve the world's forests. In this warm and wise collection of essays, she gives us a guide for living simply and well: which foods to eat and which to avoid; how to clean our homes and look after pets; how we can protect ourselves and our loved ones from illness; and why we need to appreciate nature. She provides an easy dose of healing, practical wisdom, blending modern medicine with aboriginal traditions. This inspiring, accessible book emphasizes back to basics, with the touchstone not an exotic religion or meditation practice, but the natural world around us.The Switch: The Rebirth of Energy Security in America (2017)
By Dan K. Eberhart. Published by The University of New Mexico PressFor the first time in decades, the U.S. has a rare opportunity to realistically reject oil supplies from other nations. It’s a goal that has eluded us through eight presidencies. But recent advances in hydraulic fracturing (or fracking) technology have catapulted the U.S. into its current position as the world’s #1 oil producer, surpassing energy powerhouses like Saudi Arabia. In The Switch, Dan K. Eberhart addresses a fascinating question: What would happen if the U.S. became energy self-sufficient? To answer this question, Eberhart uses a combination of firsthand interviews, vignettes, and reporting. The result is a clear and engaging analysis of how U.S. energy is fundamentally shifting geopolitics and the domestic economy.The Teacher-Friendly Guide to Climate Change (2017)
By Ingrid H. Zabel, Don Duggan-Haas and Robert M. Ross. Published by Paleontological Research InstitutionThis book focuses on scientific aspects of climate change: how climate works and why scientists think it’s changing, and the science and engineering behind the steps that would mitigate climate change and enable humans to adapt to climate changes that do occur.The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future (2014)
By Richard Alley. Published by Princeton Science LibraryIn the 1990s Richard B. Alley and his colleagues made headlines with the discovery that the last ice age came to an abrupt end over a period of only three years. In The Two-Mile Time Machine, Alley tells the fascinating history of global climate changes as revealed by reading the annual rings of ice from cores drilled in Greenland.The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming (2019)⭐
By David Wallace-Wells. Published by Tim Duggan BooksThe U.S. scientific community has long led the world in research on such areas as public health, environmental science, and issues affecting quality of life. Our scientists have produced landmark studies on the dangers of DDT, tobacco smoke, acid rain, and global warming. But at the same time, a small yet potent subset of this community leads the world in vehement denial of these dangers. Read book reviews at The New York Times and Resilience.The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World (2017) ⭐
By Jeff Goodell. Published by Little, Brown and CompanyIt was a New York Times Critics Top Book of 2017 and selected by the Washington Post as one of the 50 best non-fiction books of 2017. You might want to follow him in Rolling Stone.The Wizard and the Prophet: Two Remarkable Scientists and Their Dueling Visions to Shape Tomorrow’s World (2018)
By Charles Mann. Published by KnopfIn forty years, Earth's population will reach ten billion. Can our world support that? What kind of world will it be? Those answering these questions generally fall into two deeply divided groups--Wizards and Prophets, as Charles Mann calls them in this balanced, authoritative, nonpolemical new book.This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate (2015)
By Naomi Klein. Published by Simon & SchusterThe most important book yet from the author of the international bestseller The Shock Doctrine. A brilliant explanation of why the climate crisis challenges us to abandon the core “free market” ideology of our time, restructure the global economy, and remake our political systems.This Spaceship Earth (2015)
By David Houle and Tim Rumage. Published by David Houle and AssociatesIn this early part of the 21st Century we are in a planetary reality for which we have no precedence. The last time the atmosphere had as much CO2 as today was at least 800,000 years ago. Modern Humanity has been around for 200,000 years so there is no road map, plan or strategy we can pull up from history.Timefulness: How Thinking Like a Geologist Can Help Save the World (2018)
By Marcia Bjornerud. Published by Princeton University PressFew of us have any conception of the enormous timescales in our planet’s long history, and this narrow perspective underlies many of the environmental problems we are creating for ourselves. The passage of nine days, which is how long a drop of water typically stays in Earth’s atmosphere, is something we can easily grasp. But spans of hundreds of years—the time a molecule of carbon dioxide resides in the atmosphere—approach the limits of our comprehension. Our everyday lives are shaped by processes that vastly predate us, and our habits will in turn have consequences that will outlast us by generations. Timefulness reveals how knowing the rhythms of Earth’s deep past and conceiving of time as a geologist does can give us the perspective we need for a more sustainable future.Tropic of Chaos (2012) ⭐
By Christian Parenti. Published by Nation BooksParenti takes us to the frontlines of the new-era climate war, connecting deteriorating ecosystems and strained resources with violent outbreaks in societies across the globe.Upheaval: Turning Points for Nations in Crisis (2019)
By Jared Diamond. Published by Rodale BooksIn his international bestsellers Guns, Germs and Steel and Collapse, Jared Diamond transformed our understanding of what makes civilizations rise and fall. Now, in his third book in this monumental trilogy, he reveals how successful nations recover from crises while adopting selective changes -- a coping mechanism more commonly associated with individuals recovering from personal crises. Read a NY magazine interview with Jared Diamond.Urgency in the Anthropocene (2018)
By Amanda H. Lynch and Siri Veland. Published by The MIT PressA proposal to reframe the Anthropocene as an age of actual and emerging coexistence with earth system variability, encompassing both human dignity and environmental sustainability.Warmer: The Climate Changes us All (2018)
By Kindle Book Series. Published by Kindle Book SeriesFear and hope collide in this collection of possible tomorrows. What happens when boiling heat stokes family resentments; when a girl’s personal crisis trumps global catastrophe; or when two climate scientists decide to party like it’s the end of the world? Like the best sci-fi, these cli-fi stories offer up answers that are darkly funny, liberating, and all too conceivable.We’re Doomed. Now What?: Essays on War and Climate Change (2018)⭐
By Roy Scranton. Published by Soho PressWe’re Doomed. Now What? addresses the crisis that is our time through a series of brilliant, moving, and original essays on climate change, war, literature, and loss, from one of the most provocative and iconoclastic minds of his generation. Whether writing about sailing through the melting Arctic, preparing for Houston’s next big storm, watching Star Wars, or going back to the streets of Baghdad he once patrolled as a soldier, Roy Scranton handles his subjects with the same electric, philosophical, demotic touch that he brought to his groundbreaking New York Times essay, “Learning How to Die in the Anthropocene.”What Can I Do?: My Path from Climate Despair to Action (2020)
By Jane Fonda. Published by Penguin PressA call to action from Jane Fonda, one of the most inspiring activists of our time, urging us to wake up to the looming disaster of climate change and equipping us with the tools we need to join her in protest.Wind Energy for the Rest of Us Digital Edition (2016)
By Paul Gipe. Published by The University of New Mexico PressThe digital version of Wind Energy for the Rest of Us is now available for download. This is the version of the book for true wind geeks as it offers photographic detail not seen any other way.Zero Waste Living: The 80/20 Way: The Busy Person’s Guide to a Lighter Footprint
By Stephanie J. Miller. Published by Changemakers BooksMany of us feel powerless to solve the looming climate and waste crises. We have too much on our plates, and may think these problems are better solved by governments and businesses. This book unlocks the potential in each "too busy" individual to be a crucial part of the solution. Stephanie Miller combines her career focused on climate change with her own research and personal experience to show how a few, relatively easy lifestyle changes can create significant positive impact. Using the simplicity of the 80/20 rule, she shows us those things (the 20%) that we can do to make the biggest (80%) difference in reversing the climate and waste crises.Being the Change: Live Well and Spark a Climate Revolution (2017)⭐
By Peter Kalmus. Published by New Society PressImagine you have your own scientist living next door. In this timely but provocative book, the author points out that changing the world has to start at home. You might want to read an amazing ProPublica interview here.Don’t Even Think About It: Why Our Brains Are Hard-Wired to Ignore Climate Change (2015)
By George Marshall. Published by Bloomsbury USAFrom the founder of the Climate Outreach and Information Network, a groundbreaking take on the most urgent question of our time: Why, despite overwhelming scientific evidence, do we still ignore climate change?How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need (2021) ⭐
By Bill Gates. Published by KnopfIn this urgent, authoritative book, Bill Gates sets out a wide-ranging, practical--and accessible--plan for how the world can get to zero greenhouse gas emissions in time to avoid a climate catastrophe.How to Prepare for Climate Change: A Practical Guide to Surviving the Chaos (2021)
By David Pogue. Published by Simon & SchusterA practical and comprehensive guide to surviving the greatest disaster of our time, from New York Times bestselling self-help author and beloved CBS Sunday Morning science and technology correspondent David Pogue.Saving Us: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World (2021)
By Katharine Hayhoe Published by New Society PressIn 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.The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History (2015)
By Elizabeth Kolbert. Published by PicadorOver the last half-billion years, there have been Five mass extinctions, when the diversity of life on earth suddenly and dramatically contracted. Scientists around the world are currently monitoring the sixth extinction, predicted to be the most devastating extinction event since the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs. This time around, the cataclysm is us. In prose that is at once frank, entertaining, and deeply informed, New Yorker writer Elizabeth Kolbert tells us why and how human beings have altered life on the planet in a way no species has before. Interweaving research in half a dozen disciplines, descriptions of the fascinating species that have already been lost, and the history of extinction as a concept, Kolbert provides a moving and comprehensive account of the disappearances occurring before our very eyes. She shows that the sixth extinction is likely to be mankind's most lasting legacy, compelling us to rethink the fundamental question of what it means to be human.101 Ways to Go Zero Waste (2019)
By Kathryn Kellogg. Published by Countryman PressIn 101 Ways to Go Zero Waste, Kellogg shares tips and more, along with DIY recipes for beauty and home; advice for responsible consumption and making better choices for home goods, fashion, and the office; and even secrets for how to go waste free at the airport. “It’s not about perfection,” she says. “It’s about making better choices.”A Children’s Bible: A Novel (2020)
By Lydia Millet. Published by W. W. Norton & CompanyPulitzer Prize finalist Lydia Millet’s sublime new novel―her first since the National Book Award long-listed Sweet Lamb of Heaven―follows a group of twelve eerily mature children on a forced vacation with their families at a sprawling lakeside mansion.After Cooling: On Freon, Global Warming, and the Terrible Cost of Comfort (2021)
By Eric Dean Wilson. Published by Simon & SchusterIn After Cooling, Eric Dean Wilson braids together air-conditioning history, climate science, road trips, and philosophy to tell the story of the birth, life, and afterlife of Freon, the refrigerant that ripped a hole larger than the continental United States in the ozone layer. As he traces the refrigerant’s life span from its invention in the 1920s—when it was hailed as a miracle of scientific progress—to efforts in the 1980s to ban the chemical (and the resulting political backlash), Wilson finds himself on a journey through the American heartland, trailing a man who buys up old tanks of Freon stockpiled in attics and basements to destroy what remains of the chemical before it can do further harm.Building Soil: A Down-to-Earth Approach: Natural Solutions for Better Gardens & Yard (2015)
By Elizabeth Murphy. Published by Cool Springs PressHow do you recognize healthy soil? How much can your existing soil be improved? What are the best amendments to use for your soil? Let Building Soil answer your questions and be your guide on gardening from the ground up! Fertilizing, tilling, weed management, and irrigation all affect the quality of your soil. Using author Elizabeth Murphy's detailed instructions, anyone can become a successful soil-based gardener, whether you want to start a garden from scratch or improve an existing garden.Burn: Using Fire to Cool the Earth (2019)⭐
By Albert Bates and Kathleen Draper. Published by Chelsea Green PublishingIn order to rescue ourselves from climate catastrophe, we need to radically alter how humans live on Earth. We have to go from spending carbon to banking it. We have to put back the trees, wetlands, and corals. We have to regrow the soil and turn back the desert. We have to save whales, wombats, and wolves. We have to reverse the flow of greenhouse gases and send them in exactly the opposite direction: down, not up. We have to flip the carbon cycle and run it backwards. For such a revolutionary transformation we’ll need civilization 2.0.Climate Change: Planet Under Pressure (2020)
By Scientific American. Published by Scientific AmericanFrom increasingly severe storms to collapsing coral reefs to the displacement of Syrian citizens, in this eBook we examine the effects of Earth’s changing climate on weather systems, ecosystems and human habitability and what this means for our future.Climate of Hope (2017)⭐
By Michael Bloomberg and Carl Pope. Published by St. Martin's PressA wonderful, in-depth analysis of how municipalities, businesses and private citizens are proving to be a bold force in solving the greatest challenge of our time―the climate crisis.Cloud Cuckoo Land: A Novel (2021)
By Anthony Doerr. Published by Simon & Schuster AudioSet in Constantinople in the 15th century, in a small town in present-day Idaho, and on an interstellar ship decades from now, Anthony Doerr’s gorgeous third novel is a triumph of imagination and compassion, a soaring story about children on the cusp of adulthood in worlds in peril, who find resilience, hope - and a book. In Cloud Cuckoo Land, Doerr has created a magnificent tapestry of times and places that reflects our vast interconnectedness - with other species, with each other, with those who lived before us, and with those who will be here after we’re gone.Cooler Smarter: Practical Steps for Low-Carbon Living (2012)⭐
By Union of Concerned Scientists. Published by Island PressHow can each of us live Cooler Smarter? While the routine decisions that shape our days—what to have for dinner, where to shop, how to get to work—may seem small, collectively they have a big effect on global warming. But which changes in our lifestyles might make the biggest difference to the climate? This science-based guide shows you the most effective ways to cut your own global warming emissions by twenty percent or more, and explains why your individual contribution is so vital to addressing this global problem.Deep Time Reckoning: How Future Thinking Can Help Earth Now (One Planet) (2020)
By Vincent Ialenti. Published by The MIT PressWe live on a planet careening toward environmental collapse that will be largely brought about by our own actions. And yet we struggle to grasp the scale of the crisis, barely able to imagine the effects of climate change just ten years from now, let alone the multi-millennial timescales of Earth's past and future life span. In this book, Vincent Ialenti offers a guide for envisioning the planet's far future—to become, as he terms it, more skilled deep time reckoners. The challenge, he says, is to learn to inhabit a longer now.Denial: A Novel (2022)
By Jon Raymond. Published by Simon & SchusterThe 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. Denial is both a page-turning speculative suspense novel and a powerful existential inquisition about the perilous moment in which we currently live.Diet for a Hot Planet: The Climate Crisis at the End of Your Fork and What You Can Do about It (2010)⭐
By Anna Lappe. Published by Bloomsbury USANearly four decades after her mother, Frances Moore Lappé, published Diet for a Small Planet, sparking a revolution in our thinking about the social and environmental impact of our food choices, Anna Lappé picks up the conversation, examining another hidden cost of our food system: the climate crisis. From raising cattle in industrial-scale feedlots to razing rainforests to make palm oil for Pop-Tarts, the choices we make about how we put food on our plates, and what we do with the waste, contribute to as much as one third of total greenhouse-gas emissions. Lappé exposes the interests resisting this crucial conversation while she educates and empowers readers and eaters committed to healing the planet.Greenovation: Urban Leadership on Climate Change (2020)⭐
By Joan Fitzgerald. Published by Oxford University PressIn Greenovation, the eminent urban policy scholar Joan Fitzgerald argues that too many cities are only implementing random acts of greenness that will do little to address the climate crisis. She instead calls for "greenovation"--using the city as a test bed for adopting and perfecting green technologies for more energy--efficient buildings, transportation, and infrastructure more broadly. Further, Fitzgerald contends that while many city mayors cite income inequality as a pressing problem, few cities are connecting climate action and social justice-another aspect of greenovation. Focusing on the biggest producers of greenhouse gases in cities, buildings, energy and transportation, Fitzgerald examines how greenovating cities are reducing emissions overall and lays out an agenda for fostering and implementing urban innovations that can help reverse the path toward irrevocable climate damage. Drawing on interviews with practitioners in more than 20 North American and European cities, she identifies the strategies and policies they are employing and how support from state, provincial and national governments has supported or thwarted their efforts.Hope Matters: Why Changing the Way We Think Is Critical to Solving the Environmental Crisis (2020)
By Elin Kelsey. Published by Greystone BooksHope Matters boldly breaks through the narrative of doom and gloom to show why evidence-based hope, not fear, is our most powerful tool for change. Kelsey shares real-life examples of positive climate news that reveal the power of our mindsets to shape reality, the resilience of nature, and the transformative possibilities of individual and collective action. And she demonstrates how we can build on positive trends to work toward a sustainable and just future, before it’s too late.How Are We Going to Explain This?: Our Future on a Hot Earth (2020)
By Jelmer Mommers. Published by ScribnerFive years in the making, How Are We Going to Explain This was an instant bestseller in the Netherlands. With this revised and updated translation, including responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, Mommers brings his unique blend of realism and hope to the wider world.Local: The New Face of Food and Farming in America (2014)
By Douglas Gayeton. Published by Harper DesignCombining stunning visuals with insights and a lexicon of more than 200 agricultural terms explained by today’s thought leaders, Local showcases and explores one of the most popular environmental trends: rebuilding local food movements.Lords of the Earth: The Entwined Destiny of Wildlife and Humanity (2022)
By Cyril Christo, Marie Wilkinson and Lysander Christo. Published by Verlag KettlerLords of the Earth takes its readers on a journey to the world's oldest continent, the birthplace of Homo sapiens. The three photographers have captured the endangered soul of Africa, threatened by humans and climate change, in a series of striking duotone images. In conjunction with a gripping essay and relevant quotations, the photographs give a fascinating account of Christo's and Wilkinson's experiences, encounters, and their belief in the beauty and significance of that ancient continent. This book is a tribute not only to Africa's indigenous peoples, but also to the majestic creatures that have lived together with them since time immemorial and that are now threatened with extinction more than ever before. It includes insights into local folklore, rituals, and stories of tribespeople that provide a decidedly African perspective alongside the Western one.McSweeney’s Issue 58: 2040 AD – Climate Fiction edition (2019)
By Claire Boyle and Dave Eggers. Published by McSweeney'sSpanning six continents and nine countries―from metropolitan Mexico City to the crumbling ancient aqueducts of Turkey, the receding coastline of Singapore to the coral shores of northern Australia―McSweeney’s 58 is wholly focused on climate change, with speculative fiction from ten contributors, made in collaboration with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).Short Circuiting Policy: Interest Groups and the Battle Over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States (Studies in Postwar American Political Development) (2020)
By Leah Cardamore Stokes. Published by Oxford University PressMore than a history of renewable energy policy in modern America, Short Circuiting Policy offers a bold new argument about how the policy process works, and why seeming victories can turn into losses when the opposition has enough resources to roll back laws.Silent Spring (1962)⭐
By Rachel Carson. Published by Houghton Mifflin CompanyFirst published by Houghton Mifflin in 1962, Silent Spring alerted a large audience to the environmental and human dangers of indiscriminate use of pesticides, spurring revolutionary changes in the laws affecting our air, land, and water. "Silent Spring became a runaway bestseller, with international reverberations . . . [It is] well crafted, fearless and succinct . . . Even if she had not inspired a generation of activists, Carson would prevail as one of the greatest nature writers in American letters" (Peter Matthiessen, for Time"s 100 Most Influential People of the Century). This fortieth anniversary edition celebrates Rachel Carson"s watershed book with a new introduction by the author and activist Terry Tempest Williams and a new afterword by the acclaimed Rachel Carson biographer Linda Lear, who tells the story of Carson"s courageous defense of her truths in the face of ruthless assault from the chemical industry in the year following the publication of Silent Spring and before her untimely death in 1964.Storm Lake: A Chronicle of Change, Resilience, and Hope from a Heartland Newspaper (2018)
By Art Cullen. Published by VikingWhen The Storm Lake Times, a tiny Iowa twice-weekly, won a Pulitzer Prize for taking on big corporate agri-industry for poisoning the local rivers and lake, it was a coup on many counts: a strike for the well being of a rural community; and a triumph for that endangered species, a family-run rural news weekly.Termination Shock: A Novel (2021)
By Neal Stephenson. Published by HarperAudioFrom Neal Stephenson - who coined the term metaverse in his 1992 novel Snow Crash - comes a sweeping, prescient new thriller that transports listeners 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.The 2020s: The Most Disruptive Decade in History (2020)
By David Houle. Published by BowkerIn clear and concise prose, Houle lays out his theory of the big forces of change and how they are coming together forcefully in the 2020s. What he sees a "global stage of human evolution", because we are all experiencing very much the same world at very much the same time, which has not been true for most of human history. Houle sees changes coming to "capitalism", or to how it is regulated and practiced, and in how we view democracy in a world where there is so much dispersal of information sources and flows. But central to Houle's vision of the 2020s as a decade of change is how we will respond, and be forced to respond, to climate change. A central theme of his since his early books over a decade ago has been the concept of earth as a spaceship, to which there will be "no resupply'. His vision is that we are all "crew" on Spaceship Earth and he's been developing that theme for a long time. It really matures as he contemplates how we deal with the reality of climate change in the 2020s.The Carbon Almanac: It’s Not Too Late (2022)
By Seth Godin. Published by PortfolioThe Carbon Almanac is a once-in-a-lifetime collaboration between hundreds of writers, researchers, thinkers, and illustrators that focuses on what we know, what has come before, and what might happen next. Drawing on over 1,000 data points, the book uses cartoons, quotes, illustrations, tables, histories, and articles to lay out carbon’s impact on our food system, ocean acidity, agriculture, energy, biodiversity, extreme weather events, the economy, human health, and best and worst-case scenarios. Visually engaging and built to share, The Carbon Almanac is the definitive source for facts and the basis for a global movement to fight climate change.The Citizen’s Guide to Climate Success (2019)
By Mark Jaccard. Published by Cambridge University PressSometimes 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.The Climate Solutions Consensus: What We Know and What To Do About It (2009)
By National Council for Science and the Environment. Published by Island PressClimate Solutions Consensus presents an agenda for America. It is the first major consensus statement by the nation’s leading scientists, and it provides specific recommendations for federal policies, for state and local governments, for businesses, and for colleges and universities that are preparing future generations who will be dealing with a radically changed climate. The book draws upon the recommendations developed by more than 1200 scientists, educators and decision makers who participated in the National Council for Science and the Environment’s 8th National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment.The Good Ancestor: A Radical Prescription for Long-Term Thinking (2020)
By Roman Krznaric. Published by The ExperimentIn The Good Ancestor, Krznaric reveals six practical ways we can retrain our brains to think of the long view, including Deep-Time Humility (recognizing our lives as a cosmic eyeblink) and Cathedral Thinking (starting projects that will take more than one lifetime to complete). His aim is to inspire more “time rebels” like Greta Thunberg—to shift our allegiance from this generation to all humanity—in short, to save our planet and our future.The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back Our Planet (2021) ⭐️
By Michael E. Mann. Published by PublicAffairsIn The New Climate War, a renowned climate scientist shows how fossil fuel companies have waged a thirty-year campaign to deflect blame and responsibility and delay action on climate change, and offers a battle plan for how we can save the planet.The Soil Will Save Us: How Scientists, Farmers, and Foodies Are Healing the Soil to Save the Planet (2014)⭐
By Kristin Ohlson. Published by Rodale BooksThousands of years of poor farming and ranching practices—and, especially, modern industrial agriculture—have led to the loss of up to 80 percent of carbon from the world's soils. That carbon is now floating in the atmosphere, and even if we stopped using fossil fuels today, it would continue warming the planet. In The Soil Will Save Us, journalist and bestselling author Kristin Ohlson makes an elegantly argued, passionate case for "our great green hope"—a way in which we can not only heal the land but also turn atmospheric carbon into beneficial soil carbon—and potentially reverse global warming.The Story of CO2: Big Ideas for a Small Molecule (2020)
By Geoffrey Ozin and Mireille Ghoussoub. Published by Aevo UTPThe Story of CO2 explores all aspects of carbon dioxide, from the atomic to the universal perspective, and takes the reader on an epic journey into our physical world, starting from the moment of the Big Bang, all the way to the present world in which atmospheric CO2 concentrations continue to grow. This story seeks to inspire readers with the latest carbon utilization technologies and explain how they fit within the broader context of carbon mitigation strategies in the shift towards a sustainable energy economy.The Untold Story of the World’s Leading Environmental Institution: UNEP at Fifty (One Planet) (2021)
By Maria Ivanova. Published by The MIT PressThe United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) was founded in 1972 as a nimble, fast, and flexible entity at the core of the UN system--a subsidiary body rather than a specialized agency. It was intended to be the world's environmental conscience, an anchor institution that established norms and researched policy, leaving it to other organizations to carry out its recommendations. In this book, Maria Ivanova offers a detailed account of UNEP's origin and history. Ivanova counters the common criticism that UNEP was deficient by design, arguing that UNEP has in fact delivered on much (though not all) of its mandate.The Urban Fix: Resilient Cities in the War Against Climate Change, Heat Islands and Overpopulation (2019)⭐
By Douglas Kelbaugh. Published by RoutledgeCities are one of the most significant contributors to global climate change. The rapid speed at which urban centers use large amounts of resources adds to the global crisis and can lead to extreme local heat. The Urban Fix addresses how urban design, planning and policies can counter the threats of climate change, urban heat islands and overpopulation, helping cities take full advantage of their inherent advantages and new technologies to catalyze social, cultural and physical solutions to combat the epic, unprecedented challenges humanity faces.There Is No Planet B: A Handbook for the Make or Break Years (2021)
By Mike Berners-Lee. Published by Cambridge University PressFeeding the world, climate change, biodiversity, antibiotics, plastics, pandemics - the list of concerns seems endless. But what is most pressing, and what should we do first? Do we all need to become vegetarian? How can we fly in a low-carbon world? How can we take control of technology? And, given the global nature of the challenges we now face, what on Earth can any of us do, as individuals? Mike Berners-Lee has crunched the numbers and plotted a course of action that is full of hope, practical, and enjoyable. This is the big-picture perspective on the environmental and economic challenges of our day, laid out in one place, and traced through to the underlying roots - questions of how we live and think. This updated edition has new material on protests, pandemics, wildfires, investments, carbon targets and of course, on the key question: given all this, what can I do?To Know the World: A New Vision for Environmental Learning (2020)
By Mitchell Thomashow. Published by The MIT PressMixing memoir, theory, mindfulness, pedagogy, and compelling storytelling, Thomashow discusses how to navigate the Anthropocene's rapid pace of change without further separating psyche from biosphere; why we should understand migration both ecologically and culturally; how to achieve constructive connectivity in both social and ecological networks; and why we should take a cosmopolitan bioregionalism perspective that unites local and global. Throughout, Thomashow invites readers to participate as educational explorers, encouraging them to better understand how and why environmental learning is crucial to human flourishing.Under the Sky We Make: How to Be Human in a Warming World (2021)
By Kimberly Nicholas. Published by G.P. Putnam's SonsIn her astonishing book Under the Sky We Make, Nicholas does for climate science what Michael Pollan did more than a decade ago for the food on our plate: offering a hopeful, clear-eyed, and somehow also hilarious guide to effecting real change, starting in our own lives. Saving ourselves from climate apocalypse will require radical shifts within each of us, to effect real change in our society and culture. But it can be done. It requires, Dr. Nicholas argues, belief in our own agency and value, alongside a deep understanding that no one will ever hand us power--we're going to have to seize it for ourselves.We Are The Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast (2019)
By Jonathan Safran Foer. Published by Farrar, Straus and GirouxSome 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? Read Mark Bittman's review in the New York Times.The Climate Swerve: Reflections on Mind, Hope, and Survival (2017)
By Robert Jay Lifton. Published by The New PressClimate change presents us with what may be the most demanding and unique psychological task ever required of humankind, thanks to the power of corporate-funded climate denialists and the fact that "with its slower, incremental sequence, [climate change] lends itself less to the apocalyptic drama.” A large swathe of humanity has numbed themselves to the reality of climate change. Yet National Book Award–winning psychiatrist, historian, and public intellectual Robert Jay Lifton suggests in this lucid and moving book that recalls Rachel Carson and Jonathan Schell, evidence of how we might call upon the human mind―"our greatest evolutionary asset"―to translate a growing species awareness―or "climate swerve"―into action to sustain our habitat.The Great Transition (2015)
By Lester R. Brown. Published by W.W. Norton & CompanyBrown is well known for his sweeping assemblages of information to illustrate world trends, economic trends, and environmental trends. His revelations are usually sobering, if not frightening. But along comes The Great Transition, his newest look at world trends. Today, Brown is telling a different tale. What he sees, along with his co-writers, is a rather uplifting vision: Fossil fuels are being replaced at an increasing pace by wind and solar energy.Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things (2002)
By William McDonough and Michael Braungart Published by North Point Press"Reduce, reuse, recycle" urge environmentalists; in other words, do more with less in order to minimize damage. But as this provocative, visionary book argues, this approach perpetuates a one-way, "cradle to grave" manufacturing model that dates to the Industrial Revolution and casts off as much as 90 percent of the materials it uses as waste, much of it toxic. Why not challenge the notion that human industry must inevitably damage the natural world? In fact, why not take nature itself as our model? A tree produces thousands of blossoms in order to create another tree, yet we do not consider its abundance wasteful but safe, beautiful, and highly effective; hence, "waste equals food" is the first principle the book sets forth. Products might be designed so that, after their useful life, they provide nourishment for something new-either as "biological nutrients" that safely re-enter the environment or as "technical nutrients" that circulate within closed-loop industrial cycles, without being "downcycled" into low-grade uses (as most "recyclables" now are).Drawdown (2017)⭐
By Paul Hawken. Published by Penguin BooksIn the face of widespread fear and apathy, an international coalition of researchers, professionals, and scientists have come together to offer a set of realistic and bold solutions to climate change. One hundred techniques and practices are described here—some are well known; some you may have never heard of. They range from clean energy to educating girls in lower-income countries to land use practices that pull carbon out of the air. The solutions exist, are economically viable, and communities throughout the world are currently enacting them with skill and determination. If deployed collectively on a global scale over the next thirty years, they represent a credible path forward, not just to slow the earth’s warming but to reach drawdown, that point in time when greenhouse gases in the atmosphere peak and begin to decline. These measures promise cascading benefits to human health, security, prosperity, and well being—giving us every reason to see this planetary crisis as an opportunity to create a just and livable world.Earth v. Trump: A Failure to Protect: The Climate Defenders’ Guide to Washington Politics (2017)
By Joel B. Stronberg. Published by KindleCommentaries on today's federal politics of climate change and clean energy technologies like wind, solar and energy efficiency. The author highlights efforts of the Trump administration to roll back federal climate and clean energy policies and environmental regulations dating back to the mid-1970s.Winning the Green New Deal: Why We Must, How We Can (2020)
By Varshini Prakash and Guido Girgenti. Published by Simon & SchusterAn urgent and definitive collection of essays from leaders and experts championing the Green New Deal—and a detailed playbook for how we can win it—including contributions by leading activists and progressive writers like Varshini Prakash, Rhiana Gunn-Wright, Bill McKibben, Rev William Barber II, and more.