First, congratulations to Kayma for winning first pick of books in this year’s giveaway! Second, the giveaway continues this week, any comments on this post will be entered to win a book of their choice from the list. I thought it might be helpful to provide some context for a few of these books, below is a short review I wrote for the San Francisco and Sacramento Book Review.
Climate Change, once known as global warming, has been a hot political topic for almost two decades. Everyone seems to know what Climate Change is without being able to describe or convey their thoughts on the issue or what its effects might be. It remains ever present, yet mysterious, argued over vehemently without ever being elucidated. Overheated is Andrew Guzman’s attempt to describe what climate change is and what its most likely effects will be on humans in the next 100 years, while skirting the political obfuscations and arguments.
Guzman clearly outlines, without being alarmist or hyperbolic, what catastrophes humanity will likely face if we continue to ignore the threat. With complicated science explained through simple and effective metaphor and with a focus on mankind Overheated is a sobering look at what are future might hold: desertification, coastal flooding, the loss of vital cropland, water scarcity, mass immigration and emigration, and finally human lives. Once a disinterested academic, Guzman’s research has converted him into an advocate for change, research he shares in in this book. A great book for broaching the subject either for yourself or someone else in your life.
Don’t forget to leave a comment below for a chance to win a book from this list!
Nice logo, great use of typography. Keep up the amazing look/feel. Sorry I don’t have time to read anyone’s blog or I’d be a consumer just on the merits of your marketing sense.
Guild, are you trying to sound like a spambot?
Thanks, though the theme is not mine. I’m actually looking for a simpler theme that puts more of the focus on the words and not all the surrounding stuff.
The radical effects you outlined spur motivation to change. Riding bikes instead of cars, using as little packaging as possible, washing the clothes during off hours, cooking from scratch, and using as little heat/ and A/C as possible–these are lifestyle choices that, in time, may become popular enough to cut down on climate-changing fuels. Political involvement is a necessary vector for change, but it’s not for everyone.
Nice review!
We have reporters call our lab occasionally, and they usually ask about how climate change will make X or Y worse. I wouldn’t mind, except that it’s often on a subject unrelated to what we actually do!
If you don’t work on it why do they call your lab? What do you end up telling the reporters usually?
I’m already feeling the climate change in my dank basement dwelling.