Showing posts with label global warming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label global warming. Show all posts

Earth: The Operators' Manual Review

Earth: The Operators' Manual
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Richard Alley combines in-depth technical expertise on climate change with a unique ability to connect with and speak with (and not merely to) a non-scientific audience. This book and the PBS series to which it is a companion is readily accessible to any person with a reasonable intellectual curiosity and, more importantly, an open mind. As a self-identified registered Republican and "right of center" political ideology, Alley is the perfect messenger for those ideologically predisposed to wanting not to believe the substantial body of peer-reviewed and thoroughly vetted climate science. His PBS three-part special and his new book should be must-reading for anyone wanting to stay conversant on energy and related climate issues. A winner.

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Journeys With the Ice Bear Review

Journeys With the Ice Bear
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Kennan Ward:''Grizzlies in the Wild": This is the stuff that gets a "couch potato" out to the campsites! Nature at it's extreme, Indian legend, bears so huge and unique that that they are known far and wide by their names alone. Carniverous and dangerous, the author respects them all. The tenacity of Ward's pursuits and his dedication as a photographer, brings us one of the most inspiring and picturesque books that i've read in a very long time.

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Journeys With the Ice Bear is a breathtaking firsthand adventure inot the unforgiving world of one of nature's most extraordinary animals---the polar bear. Combining spectacular photography and insightful writing, renowned wildlife photographer and author Kennan Ward captures the essence of the harsh yet remarkable lives of these great wandering ice bears. Chronicling his many excursions near and into the Arctic Circle, Ward describes in vivid detail the severity of such places as Siberia and the wonders he encounters in these remote and rugged environments. Although it is Ward's intimate journeys with the polar bear that are thoughtfully retold, it is his deep respect and admiration for this denizen of the ice that comes shinning through.--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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World Made by Hand: A Novel Review

World Made by Hand: A Novel
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It's really good. Surprisingly so, given that most attempts at novelisation by people who are basically pundits on an educational/propaganda mission to save the world are dismal artistic failures. But this novel is good, the guy can actually write.
It's a realistic depiction of the post-collapse USA. What collapse, you ask? Not exactly specifically told, but somehow related to Peak Oil, financial ruination, that kind of stuff. He depicts the after-shocks on the ground, rubber-meets-pavement (or I should say, hooves-meet-pavement, I guess).
The world has shrunk into an uneasy Darwinian jostling, local warlordism and gangsterish Machiavellian counterpunching among various ugly power cells, with a bunch of religion leavening the stink, er ... the stew. One civil gentleman tries to hold onto some kind of rational center.
Here's a powerful message from this book (so don't say nobody clued you in time) - Learn a practical trade, something useful, essential to daily life, that requires neither electric power nor high-tech tools or materials. Butcher, baker, candle-stick maker.
Few Interesting Points:
1. Speech style: Everybody's speech pattern has reverted to an oddly folksy kind of 19th century, Mark-Twain-ish patois.
2. Ism's: Not the slightest hint of feminism has survived The Fall. Women are pretty much seen but not heard. And homosexuality seems to perhaps have been swept away by the dreaded plague of "Mexican Flu" maybe? African-American's don't exist in upstate New York, but racial trouble festers elsewhere across the country.
3. Infrastructure: Town in upstate New York benefits very heavily from left-over 19th century infrastructure, most very especially the robustly designed and constructed gravity-fed water ducts. Rest of the country will not have this legacy! *bite nails*
4. Give thanks for (current) hot showers, razors, modern dentistry. No mention is made of the deodorant situation.
Although presented as a disaster scenario, I feel the author secretly has quite a hard-on for the mid 19th century.
Kunstler's depiction of collapsed upper NY state reminds me more than anything of Ishikawa Eisuke's great (Japanese language) novel '2050 Nen ha: Edo Jidai' (Year 2050: Return to the Edo Period), which also gives a local-eye view of a post-collapse, formerly high-tech society. These two novels are very similar, but Kunstler probably didn't model on Ishikawa's earlier work as that is not available in English.
I've read hundreds of apocalypse / post-collapse books, 'The Postman' type of stuff. Some of them, such as Luke Rhinehart's 'Long Voyage Back' or Jean Hegland's 'Into the Forest', are better written, real literature. And some have wilder gripping action, obviously 'Lucifer's Hammer' comes to mind for that. But for poignant realism, to a reader living exactly where and how we are right now, 'World Made By Hand' strikes closest to the heart.
More than anything, this book is sad. It will make you sad. It's a cliche to say that we take everything for granted. We do, but you need that truth rubbed in your face sometimes to revitalize it. This book really does that.
But if you really want to put yourself through an emotional coffee-grinder in the opposite direction, stomp yourself in the gut by reading "The Road" (Cormac McCarthy) immediately prior to "World by Hand". Then you'll feel that Kuntstler's "World", where at least the grass still grows and the rivers still flow, is for all its horrors, a beautiful Elysian Field, direct from the hand of whatever Lord you care to name.


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