Eaarth (Hardcover)

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Author:  Bill McKibben
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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0805090568
ISBN-13: 9780805090567
Buy.com Sku: 212711085
Publish Date: 4/13/2010
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 8.5H x 5.75L x 1.25T
Pages:  253
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Twenty years ago, with "The End of Nature," McKibben offered one of the earliest warnings about global warming. Those warnings went mostly unheeded; now, he insists, we need to acknowledge that we''ve waited too long, and that massive change is not only unavoidable but already under way. (Environmental Studies)
Annotation:
In his 1990 debut, THE END OF NATURE, Bill McKibben presented a cogent environmental analysis which predicted a future of climate change and environmental deterioration. Twenty years later, all of McKibben's forecasts have come to fruition, and he now sees little choice but to discuss those devastating developments in the past tense. According to McKibben, the damage is done, and the Earth which nurtured humanity for thousands of years has been so irreparably altered that we would do better to call it by a new name--Eaarth. With his typical blend of evidentiary data and revelatory insight, McKibben provides a comprehensive summary of how the steady increase in temperatures caused primarily by fossil-fuel burning has directly caused the decline of the global ecosystem, marked by melting icecaps, acidifying oceans, dwindling diversity among species, and more extreme climactic events. Of course, McKibben remains one of the most outspoken and effective environmental advocates alive, and he is far from throwing in the towel, as he outlines a series of very reasonable lifestyle changes which must be made in order for people to adapt to life on our new planet.
Praise
"What distinguishes McKibben as an environmental writer beyond his literary finesse and firm grasp of the complexities of science and society is his generous pragmatism, informed vision of small-scale solutions to our food and energy needs, and belief that Eaarth will remain a nurturing planet if we face facts, jettison destructive habits, and pursue new ways of living with creativity and conscience." (starred review) - Donna Seaman 12/01/2009

"EAARTH is a scrupulous and impassioned account of the severely compromised globe on which we now live. He lays out the myriad ways in which climate change has remade our world, but he also goes much further, chronicling its current and future human toll." - Jed Lipinski 04/16/2010

"An excellent storyteller and a graceful writer, McKibben uses those skills to make his disheartening tale interesting....He presents anecdotes about recent floods, droughts, melting glaciers, and other unprecedented weather-related events, and he describes the scientific evidence that indicates they are linked to human emissions of greenhouse gases....There is enough of a possibility that McKibben's portrait is correct that we should do what we can to limit and prepare for the possible damage." - Warren Leon 04/22/2010

"Unlike many writers on environmental cataclysm, McKibben is actually a writer, and a very good one at that. He is smart enough to know that the reader needs a dark chuckle of a bone thrown at him now and then to keep plowing through the bad news." - Paul Greenberg 05/09/2010

"EAARTH is tough reading, with a tough message. It offers a view of economic growth not typically encountered in mainstream discussion, with all its moral dimensions unmasked and clarified. It takes us away from fantasies of living as we have in the past, prompted by both empirical and ethical necessity. It goes as far as to question the true basis of happiness, whether it is reflected in standard measures of economic growth, or whether it lies in neighborliness, community, self-reliance, and harmonious coexistence with nature." - Anis Shivani 05/30/2010

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PREFACE

I''m writing these words on a gorgeous spring afternoon, perched on the bank of a brook high along the spine of the Green Mountains, a mile or so from my home in the Vermont mountain town of Ripton. The creek burbles along, the picture of a placid mountain stream, but a few feet away there''s a scene of real violence a deep gash through the woods where a flood last summer ripped away many cubic feet of tree and rock and soil and drove it downstream through the center of the village. Before the afternoon was out, the only paved road into town had been demolished by the rushing water, a string of bridges lay in ruins, and the governor was trying to reach the area by helicopter.

Twenty years ago, in 1989, I wrote the first book for a general audience about global warming, which in those days we called the "greenhouse effect." That book, The End of Nature, was mainly a philosophical argument. It was too early to see the practical effects of climate chan

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