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Review of Michael Mann’s ‘Our Fragile Moment: how lessons from the Earth’s past can help us survive the climate crisis’
Read more: Review of Michael Mann’s ‘Our Fragile Moment: how lessons from the Earth’s past can help us survive the climate crisis’‘I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe… Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion… I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain… Time to die.’ Rutger Hauer’s character from ‘Blade Runner’, Roy Batty, closes the film with a…
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Review of ‘Sea Change: An Atlas of islands in a Rising Ocean’ by Christina Gerhardt
Read more: Review of ‘Sea Change: An Atlas of islands in a Rising Ocean’ by Christina GerhardtThe map of the known world is being redrawn. Christina Gerhardt, Associate Professor at the University of Hawai’I and Senior Fellow at the University of California, explores the shifting worlds across six major oceans and seas- from the Arctic to the Caribbean Sea in ‘Sea Change- An Atlas of Islands in a Rising Ocean.’ In…
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Review of ‘World of Thermo: Grim Reaping’ by Guy Walton
Read more: Review of ‘World of Thermo: Grim Reaping’ by Guy WaltonAll great sagas have an ending. Esteemed meteorologist Guy Walton’s ‘World of Thermo’ series has included all the elements of a true saga: journeys, friendships, sacrifice, help from characters with potent, magical powers and an evil villain who needs to be vanquished. Great storytelling is at the heart of climate communication- those stories that stay…
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Review of ‘Humanity’s Moment: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope’ by Joëlle Gergis
Read more: Review of ‘Humanity’s Moment: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope’ by Joëlle Gergis‘Humanity’s Moment’ is a masterclass in climate communication, with Dr Gergis detailing the climate impacts already being felt and aligning these with real emotional and psychological responses. Dr Gergis served as a lead author for the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report and is an authority on the climate science underpinning the report. This is not a…
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Review of Jeff Goodell’s ‘The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet.’
Read more: Review of Jeff Goodell’s ‘The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet.’2023 has been the year where we have recently seen global temperature records being broken repeatedly, sea surface temperature anomalies in the North Atlantic making the international news, and Antarctica sea ice extent hitting new record lows. In a world that has seen the UN describe climate change as being ‘out of control’, Jeff Goodell’s…
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Review of ‘The Three Ages of Water’ by Peter Gleick
Read more: Review of ‘The Three Ages of Water’ by Peter GleickGleick’s book is an engaging, detailed and yet wide-ranging, authoritative exploration of the relationship between humans and water and how a positive sustainable world is within our reach. He describes that we have already had the first two Ages of Water, with the Third Age being the positive, equitable vision that realises the benefits of…
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Review of ‘Breathe: Tackling the Climate Emergency’ by Sadiq Khan
Read more: Review of ‘Breathe: Tackling the Climate Emergency’ by Sadiq Khan‘Breathe, said the wind How can I breathe at a time like this,when the air is full of the smokeof burning tires, burning lives?’ -Lynn Ungar Despite the frankly ridiculous tearing up of Sadiq Khan’s book ‘Breathe’ by Talk TV presenters on live television a few days ago, no stunt by them can get away…
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Review of ‘The Future of Geography’ by Tim Marshall
Read more: Review of ‘The Future of Geography’ by Tim MarshallWhen did a spacecraft from Earth first land on the Moon? Who owns the Moon? How many people have walked on the Moon? How many flags are there on the Moon? What legal frameworks regulate space activity and who enforces these frameworks? Tim Marshall returns in ‘The Future of Geography’, a prophetic vision of what…
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Review of ‘Reconnection- Fixing Our Broken Relationship with Nature’, by Miles Richardson
Read more: Review of ‘Reconnection- Fixing Our Broken Relationship with Nature’, by Miles RichardsonIn ‘Reconnection- Fixing Our Broken Relationship with Nature’, Miles Richardson charts the causes of nature decline in the UK and convincingly argues that a re-evaluation and a reset of this relationship will help give nature a chance. Miles Richardson is Professor of Human Factors and Nature Connectedness at the University of Derby and has gained…
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Review of ‘Not Too Late’ edited by Rebecca Solnit and Thelma Young Lutunatabua
Read more: Review of ‘Not Too Late’ edited by Rebecca Solnit and Thelma Young Lutunatabua‘Not Too Late’ is a collection of climate hope messages from climate scientists, organisers and activists, who challenge us to recognise that the future is yet to be decided and that our actions do matter. Solnit opens the collection in a powerful manner, stating the current state of affairs. ‘It is late. We are deep…