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Category Archives: Environment
The Overstory
A simple description of The Overstory by Richard Powers is that it’s a novel about nine people and their relationships with trees. Sounds weird, right? Well, The Overstory is definitely an unusual novel. But it’s much more, and much stranger … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment
Tagged book review, cli-fi, ecology, fiction, forest, redwood, richard powers, tree
8 Comments
The Climate Diet
Climate change is such an overwhelming problem it’s hard to know what individuals can do about it. It’s hard to see how we can have any impact at all. But there are meaningful steps we can take to both modify our … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment
Tagged book review, carbon emissions, carbon footprint, climate change, nonfiction, paul greenberg, sustainability
2 Comments
How to Avoid a Climate Disaster
Around the world we humans are adding an average of fifty-one billion (51,000,000,000) tons of greenhouse gasses to Earth’s atmosphere every year. To avoid a climate disaster, we need to get to zero. 51 billion to zero. That’s how Microsoft … Continue reading
The Good Ancestor
We were warned. Lots of people warned us about the possibility of a global pandemic years before the outbreak of COVID-19. But we didn’t listen and we didn’t prepare. We’ve known for decades about the catastrophic effects of greenhouse gas … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment
Tagged book review, climate change, doughnut economics, good ancestor, nonfiction, planetary boundaries, roman krznaric, sustainability
2 Comments
Rewilding
What would it mean to “restore” Earth’s environment? Scientists are warning us that climate change, deforestation, mass extinctions and a host of other environmental problems are driving the biosphere to a tipping point. How do we pull back from the … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment
Tagged biodiversity, book review, cain blythe, ecology, non-fiction, paul jepson, rewilding
9 Comments
A Life on Our Planet
David Attenborough has spent his entire career making documentary films about life on our planet. Series like Life on Earth, and The Blue Planet set the standards for outstanding film-making and educated hundreds of millions of people about the beauty, … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment
Tagged biodiversity, book review, david attenborough, doughnut economics, nonfiction, planetary boundaries, rewilding, sustainability
6 Comments
Nonfiction November: Be the Expert/Ask the Expert/Become the Expert
Week 3 of Nonfiction November is hosted by Rennie @ What’s Nonfiction. And the prompt is: Three ways to join in this week! You can either share 3 or more books on a single topic that you have read and … Continue reading
Nonfiction November: My Year in Nonfiction
I’ve been informed by reliable sources, namely Rennie @ What’s Nonfiction, that this month is Nonfiction November. Great idea! Apparently there will be weekly prompts throughout the month. Even better! This week’s prompt comes from Leann @ Shelf Aware: Take a … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Environment, Law and justice, Politics
Tagged book review, nonficnov, nonfiction
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All Hell Breaking Loose: The Pentagon’s Perspective on Climate Change
Those tree-hugging liberals over at the Pentagon just don’t get it. They don’t understand that climate change is a hoax and the Trump White House doesn’t want to hear about it. They keep working away, defying Presidential directives, studying and … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Energy, Environment
Tagged All Hell Breaking Loose, book review, climate change, Klare, nonfiction, Pentagon
5 Comments
Solar power is becoming insanely cheap
The cost of solar power has fallen by a factor of 5 since 2010, and it will keep falling for decades to come. That’s the gist of a May 14, 2020 blog post titled Solar’s Future Is Insanely Cheap (2020) … Continue reading
Posted in Energy, Environment
Tagged decarbomization, fossil fuel, lcoe, ramez naam, solar, solar energy, solar power
2 Comments