Environment and Nature Books


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Environment and Nature Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Environment and Nature
El Lorax
Published in Library Binding by Lectorum Publications (1993-01-01)
Authors: Dr. Seuss and Aida E. Marcuse
List price: $14.95
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GREAT BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-04
I love Dr. Seuss so much. This book is a great tool to teach young kids how to take care of the enivorment. My favorite Dr. Seuess book. <3

Classic Story Great, but Bad Printing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
I love this book. Well, not the exact book I received, but the original "Lorax" story. The text of the book I received from Amazon is slightly blurred: some sort of printing error, I guess. And of course, it's nigh on impossible to find an edition of the book with the truly telling line about Lake Erie anymore ("...looking for water that isn't so smeary./I hear things are just as bad up in Lake Erie."). Ah well - it's much better to have this shell-of-a-copy of the tale than none at all!

The Lorax
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
This is a great gift for a young child in your life. Not only does it tell a story that sends an environmental message appropriate to the time, but it IS it's own message. I was thrilled when it arrived and I saw the "made from recycled materials" stamped on the front cover. This book can help you start the story of conservation with your kids.

Crazy Environmentalist HOGWASH!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
Right on, all of you people who have given this book a negative review! What a terrible book to give to a child! Who does Dr. Seuss think he is, anyway? - Trying to teach young people about our moral obligations to future generations, and environmental stewardship... it's appalling. Doesn't anyone care about the struggling, rich, conservative business owners (Like the proud, pro-capitalist, two star reviewer Jeffrey Gray); desperately strip mining our mountains, clear-cutting our forests, polluting our streams, for their own personal wealth and gain? What about THEM? Never mind the fact that the current rate of extinction on this planet is estimated at one species every 20 minutes! Who cares that if everyone on earth were to live like the average North American, it would require 4-5 more planets to keep up with the drain on natural resources! I mean, the Bush administration has been trying so hard to keep facts and figures like these from the public that they've even gone to the extent of changing and editing scientific reports on climate change for our own well being... and positive reviews of "The Lorax" are the thanks they get?
If more children were to read this tripe, they might actually begin to understand our inter-connectedness to all living beings, and accidentally inherit a world with a sustainable future. Is that really what we want for our kids?!
Maybe the Bar-ba-loots, Swomee-Swans, and Humming-Fish should think twice before settling in to a perfectly viable habitat with such vast economic potential. (Wink.)
Peace.


An important message
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
The Lorax is a wonderful commentary on environmental issues and an outstanding book by a very creative and ingenious author. It helps young children understand the importance of actively saving ones environment, while being entertaining at the same time. This is among the best of Dr. Seuss's works.

Environment and Nature
Old Turtle
Published in Audio Cassette by Whole Person Associates (1995-10)
Author: Douglas Wood
List price: $11.95
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baby book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
"Old Turtle" has become a tradition of giving in our family. When we recieve the announcement that a child has been born, we get a copy for the babe. We like to think that this is one of the ways this child will first hear about creation and our place in it. The illustrations are simple and exquisite, the narrative compelling. I'm a "big kid" and I love it.

Best Childhood Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
This is the necessary item for me to take to Baby Showers. It's a delightful story, teaching children pictorally about the character of God. I highly, highly recommend it.

Inspirational for all ages!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
Old Turtle This simple turtle tale is similar to the wise old man to whom others come for wisdom but the format of this slender book is beautiful! Artistically drawn in rich colors and in varied page lay-outs! I bought 3 extra copies to give as gifts to children 7 yrs. old and younger.

The best children's book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
This is a beautiful book for children and adults as well. It is the perfect gift for a new baby, a christening, an adoption of an older child. I have even given it to adults for special occasions. I can't think of another book that everyone should have more than this one. It is so lovely with a wonderful message. Loving turtles makes it even better.

Looking for a baby gift?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
Look no further - this book is a great gift for any one who loves children - teachers, grandparents, parents, nannies, churches. Our 3 year old adores it and I love what it teaches him: to look for the divine in everything and everyone he sees. What if we all did that?

Environment and Nature
Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw It Coming
Published in Hardcover by Viking (2007-05-10)
Author: Paul Hawken
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Blessed Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
I am giving this book to many friends who care about social justice and the critical issues facing the environment. Paul Hawken has made a clear case for citizen activism that combines a commitment to both, noting that planet Earth is an endangered species, particularly from global warming but also from the exploitation of its resources. His history of the environmental movement and the appendix, which lists a myriad of groups doing important environmental justice work, makes this a very important book.

blessed optimism
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
A book anybody who cares about living creatures and our universe should read. It shows how an amazing number of people in both small and large groups are getting together to try and make a difference. Inspiring and filled with hope which in these often dark days is uplifting. As good and important a book as will ever be written.

Something new under the sun
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
A few years ago, activist author Paul Hawken set out to create a database of every non-profit in the world categorized into a taxonomy, which is now on the web in a sort of Wikipedia community format at wiserearth (dot) org - This had never really been done before and he was surprised by the sheer number of organizations working independently to make the world a better place. He found a common thread that all were concerned about the environment and human justice. From this he concluded that there is a global "movement" (a word with many qualifiers) the likes of which have never been seen. He compares it to the "Industrial Revolution" - at the time everyone knew something different was happening, but no one had a name for it or even described it as a unique event, it was both everywhere and unrecognized. Likewise, according to Hawken, this global movement is from the ground up, with no core ideology or leadership, it's an historical mass movement that has snuck up on us and only now being recognized as a major shift.

I think Hawken's message is a powerful one and will appeal to the millions of people working in small groups in isolation against large and powerful forces. Hawken does in fact describe a new trend that has been observed by others: the recent rise, proliferation and influence of NGOs. Hawken contends top-down organizations led by ideologies are old school 20th century, the future is distributed small organic holistic, sort of like how Wikipedia is made, millions of individuals (small and large NGOs) contributing expertise on a local basis that has the net effect of global human and environmental justice.

I had some problems with the book, it is clearly a one-sided manifesto and much of it is historical anecdote of well known incidents (the Bolivian water wars, the India coke pesticide case, etc..) and presents a single side. These issues are extremely complex, it is rarely so easy to say there are good and bad guys, it is harmful IMO to present these controversial issues so one-sided and hold them up as poster children for reform. Why not look at the real undisputed success stories that everyone can get behind? He does in some cases such as Rachel Carson's fight against DDT. Overall I was touched by Hawken's passion,
vision and (ironically) his idealism.

A message of hope for the future
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-13
It almost always happens, when I speak in telephone conferences with university classes or with larger groups, that someone will ask if I have hope for the future and, if so, why. My answer has always been an intuitive one, the intuition being that in the last fifteen years or so awareness of the perils we face in the immediate future has expanded explosively-and that this in itself provides authentic hope for the future.

In Blessed Unrest Paul Hawken, with his extraordinary passion for information, has transformed my mere intuition into a reality. Acting on the same "hunch" as mine, he "began to count. . . . I initially estimated a total of 30,000 environmental organizations around the globe; when I added social justice and indigenous peoples' rights organizations, the number exceeded 100,000. . . . I now believe there are over one-and maybe even two-million organizations working toward ecological sustainability and social justice."

He concludes this encyclopedic work with these heartening words: "There is no question that the environmental movement is critical to our survival. Our house is literally burning, and it is only logical that environmentalists expect the social justice movement to get on the environmental bus. But it is the other way around: the only way we are going to put out the fire is to get on the social justice bus and heal our wounds, because in the end, there is only one bus. Armed with that growing realization, we can address all that is harmful externally. What will guide us is a living intelligence that creates miracles every second, carried forth by a movement with no name."

An eye-opener, but not religion.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
When I first read about this title, I didn't exactly knew what to think of it. Running a business in my daily life, would I have enough time to read about this subject and act accordingly on its writings?

Until now, actions have not flourished yet, but there is a change of mindset. This book addresses the rise of environmental organizations and the facts that are show to us about it by the media. Although this is ofcourse a one-sided story, it does not feel like one. And that's when you know someone is right.

Unfortunately, some parts of the book are boring when you wonder where he is going with his story. I found this book worth just four stars, but it could have easily been three as well. The content is good, and it addresses some important issues every person should confront himself with. But to say this book calls for action, I would like to disagree with that.

Environment and Nature
Better Basics for the Home: Simple Solutions for Less Toxic Living
Published in Paperback by Three Rivers Press (1999-06-01)
Author: Annie Berthold-Bond
List price: $18.95
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Great Book!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
This is an absolutely great book for anyone interested in "greening" their home. Their recommendations are great for the enviornment, for your health, home and save you money!

less toxic living
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-01
It's amazing all the products you can clean with that are already in your kitchen and, more importantly, not toxic.

Informative and useful!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-19
This is a great book. I got it not really thinking I would use it as much as I have. I use it for body creams, cleansers and moisturizers AND I use if for household cleaning, furniture polish, sachets, and more. And her explanations of how different ingredients work is also very helpful. I now buy very few commercial cleaners (Bon Ami, Ecover laundry detergent) mostly because I can't find washing soda anywhere locally.

Loved it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
This is an excellent guide for a less toxic living approach. It provides you with 868 easy to make natural and chemical free formulas for Household Cleaners, Skin & Hair Care, Lawn and Garden Care, Paint, Art Projects and so much more. It's a great resource to have around. I really liked how most of the recipes only call for a couple of ingredients and are really easy to make. And best of all they work too. One of my favorites is the Aloe Vera Moisturizer with Avocado Oil. It's the only Moisturizer I still use for my face and it works great!

Highly recommend this book!

Terrific better Basics
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
This book is filled with natural and non-toxic cleaning products, personal care products and more. I have made a number of cleaning potions from Better Basics and am loving the way my house smells when I clean it! Meaning...instead of the old days using harsh chemicals, my home smells like almost nothing--just clean!

I was going to post a review for Annie Bond's Home Enlightenment: Practical, Earth-Friendly Advice for Creating a Nurturing, Healthy, and Toxin-Free Home and Lifestyle, but noticed it is no longer in print. Too bad, because it was good. However, if you want similar information, check out Harmonious Environment: Beautify, Detoxify and Energize Your Life, Your Home and Your PlanetBoth of these books deal with the next steps to take once your home is non-toxic, including ways to make your home your sanctuary.

Environment and Nature
Reflections in Bullough's Pond: Economy and Ecosystem in New England (Revisiting New England)
Published in Library Binding by UPNE (2000-04-01)
Author: Diana Muir
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Came for the topic, stayed for the author
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-17
Ms Muir is a great storyteller. I was interested in the topic and prepared to slog through boring text to learn something, but this was AMAZING. Read like a novel. She sees inter-relationships and draws conclusions which taught me a lot. Now I want to read everything she's written. I was sorry when I finished this book.

breaks new ground
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-25
It is hard to imagine how Reflections in Bullough's Pond could have been better written. Diana Muir gives an account of the interplay between New England's economic history and its environment in a lapidary prose which never leaves the reader behind. By the end of the book we are enlightened about the ebb and flow of these matters over the five hundred-odd years from early European settlement to modern times without ever being overwhelmed, for Ms Muir always wears her erudition lightly.

She breaks new ground in her treatment of the environment as both an economic resource and as a complex-often vulnerable-amalgam of ecosystems. Her thesis is that we are living on capital, be it fossil fuel, topsoil or forest-she is particularly compelling on the vulnerable biochemistry of these last. Unusually, however, Ms Muir is scrupulous in her use of statistics and fastidious in her argument. She never seeks to undermine the legitimacy of the economic impulse, though she does not flinch from her conclusion: an argument for restraint in economic activity and population.

Nor does she lose sight of the propensity of ecosystems to renew themselves, albeit often in new forms: she is pleased-almost amused-by the return of the beaver and the moose, while regretting the extinction of the elm and the emergence of local spruce monocultures. Indeed Ms Muir expresses herself more forcefully on the loss of flora than fauna. Perhaps this is because the long life cycles of the former make it harder to take an optimistic view of their capacity to renew themselves. Alternatively it may be because the collapse of agriculture in New England following the opening up of the West, has stimulated the return to southern New England of so many species formerly evicted to Canada.

Reflections in Bullough's Pond is no naïve elegy for a Paradise Lost; it never loses sight of a human interplay with the landscape which long antedates industrialisation, not to say European settlement. In a particularly ingenious section of the book, Ms Muir reminds us that in the middle of the nineteenth century, the courts and legislatures altered common law doctrines of liability to free up industrial activity. This reflected the climate of the times. Ms Muir argues that the climate of our own times may well give rise to more extensive liability concepts to restrain the corporations, notions very much with the tail wind of popular and professional thinking.

Given the book's generosity and elegance, it seems curmudgeonly to cavil at any part of it. But a couple of issues do arise. First forests. Since the invention of agriculture, we have cleared them for the simple reason that we have better uses for the land. This has been going on in the Old World for millennia. Of course there have been local environmental disasters, eg in North Africa and Mesopotamia, but nothing sufficiently general to justify veneration of forests as a precautionary measure. This is an artefact of late-twentieth century sentiment in the New World. There such virgin forests as have not lost within living memory are being destroyed even now, thus the local salience of the issue. Over the past fifteen years their defenders have sought to enlist support by arguing that they served one or another vital purpose: producing oxygen, acting as feedstock for drugs, now Ms Muir points to their role in topsoil. The first two arguments are infrequently heard these days. As to the last, let me point out that where I grew up in the eastern part of England, the ground was cleared eight or nine hundred years ago, but the topsoil remains sufficiently fertile for the local farmers to get out record yields.

I was also left uncertain as to the course Ms Muir might prescribe for the several billion who have never seen Bullough's Pond, and whose habitats have been profoundly altered by economic activity for millenia rather than centuries. The residents of Asia's great river valleys cleared the forests long before Columbus saw the New World. They have to eat-with luck raise themselves above thoughts of the next meal. Ms Muir has practical suggestions as to how the courts might restrain US corporations, but nothing on how to restrain the aspirations of those who dream of a fraction of American prosperity. I suspect she is wise enough to know that there is nothing to be done on this score. In a rare nod towards the nether reaches of environmental alarmism, she hints that she expects nature to impose population restraint, if we do not. I am more sanguine. In whatever might come to pass as in what has come before, we will wade through. As we must.

Not just for New Englanders
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-25
Other reviewers have discussed the virtues of the book, so I will only add that the lessons to be learned from this well written and fascinating study are relevant to the entire planet, not just New England. As such, the book is highly recommended to anyone anywhere who is interested in mankind's relationship to the environment and its effects on culture and economics.

on reflection, dazzling
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-02
This is one of the best books I have ever read- period! At the core of the book is Ms. Muir's message that we are part of nature, not separate from or above nature, and we have a great responsibility to maintain the integrity of the environment. Granted, this message is not new. Where this book is very different is how Ms. Muir leads up to this message. She shows how the New England landscape changed from one where farming dominated to one that was a mixture of many different types of mills and factories. You learn the consequences of everything that was done along the way: the consequences to fish and birds of damming rivers; the consequences to forests and to the air we breath of heavy logging; the consequences of catching too many of one type of fish, etc. What is great about this book is that Ms. Muir does not deal in hazy generalities. She takes you step by step and shows you specifically how certain actions cause certain changes in the environment, often unforseen. There is nothing simplistic in her observations and she knows there are no easy answers. She lays out the data for you and you can come to your own conclusions. But what really takes this book to another level is the fascinating biographical information that Ms. Muir provides concerning the many, many New Englanders that invented the machines of the Industrial Revolution and kept the economy vibrant as the importance of agriculture diminished. The way this book is put together is very unusual, due to the combination of all of the above factors and in the space of 248 pages you will learn a great deal of information. The research Ms. Muir must have done in writing this book is staggering and her knowledge across many different areas is amazing. Don't miss reading this book.

An Intriguing Glimpse at New Englandýs History
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
Using a pond near her home in Newton, MA as a backdrop, Diana Muir weaves a compelling view of New England history, which she argues is a series of ecological crises.

From pre-Columbian times, Muir says, New England was populated by individuals struggling on a land that was not conducive to making a living. Radical solutions to unsolvable problems were their only escape. In the 1790s, when farming was the only occupation, a growing population and a soil spent by generations of misuse, resulted in a dearth of farmable land. With no prospects and no future, individuals like Eli Whitney and Thomas Blanchard, were forced to look for creative solutions to society's problems and set in motion an industrial revolution.

I was particularly intrigued by the story of Frederick Tudor, the man who in 1806 introduced ice to Martinique. It is one thing to sell ice to people who because of their location, understand the concept. It is quite another, to sell ice to people who have never experienced it, to say nothing about the practical necessities of ice houses to warehouse the product.

His father's real estate speculation losses left Tudor with nothing but ambition and a house with a pond in Saugus, MA. He succeeded after two difficult decades. There was always a wrinkle to be solved before a fortune could be built. Iceboxes had to be designed and then marketed in southern ports to people who had to be taught how to preserve it.

This phenomenon explains why there so many Crystal and Silver Lakes dot the New England landscape, relics of an enterprising age. Savvy ice dealers understood that attractive names sell products. For a brief period even Muir's Bullough's Pond was briefly renamed Silver Lake.

Diana Muir e-mailed me twice during the past two years introducing her book to me. Having read her book, I am grateful for her persistence. If you enjoy reading unique looks at our history, I implore not to wait for her to contact you. Read her book; you will not regret it.

Environment and Nature
Song for the Blue Ocean: Encounters Along the World's Coasts and Beneath the Seas
Published in Paperback by Holt Paperbacks (1999-06-15)
Author: Carl Safina
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Faulous book - a must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
Carl is a wonderful writer and brilliant scientist, this book covers a wide range of issues while keeping it lively and hopeful.

First Impression
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-21
I bought this book for my daughter who will go to graduate school to study marine science next year. I have not read the book but based on other reviews I think this must be an excellent book especially my daughter is very much concerned about preserving nature. Anyway, I was a litle bit disappointed when I received the book. I ordered soft copy and the print was so small that I don't know whether it will turn off my daughter's interest since she is very nearshighted. I don't mind if the book is thicker or bigger.

What if we don't?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
Part exploration, part eloquent plea for action, this is the report of a scientist's journey toward understanding the plight of our seas. Safina travelled with tuna fishermen and coral research teams, salmon boats and conservationists fighting for the Columbia Gorge. Their stories are here, in their words, set against a backdrop painted by a Yale professor with the soul of a poet. The litany is one of collapsing fisheries and dying reefs, huge nets that are scraping the sea floor into a featureless, lifeless plain, unbridled greed, and people whose heritage as sailors and fishermen is disappearing in a generation. Here also is the graceful breach of a humpback whale, the slow lazy lolling of an ocean sunfish, and the bullet quick movement of bluefin tuna under Atlantic sunrises and Pacific sunsets. An altogether beautiful book about the slow death of the sea. Safina believes we can protect the bounty and diversity he so eloquently describes. The question he poses is, "Will we choose to?" and suggests that one way to help answer that is to ask another. "What if we don't?"

Beauty beyond compare
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-29
This is one of the most beautiful, powerful books I have ever read. Safina's journey encompasses the entire world and all points of view. His words have inspired me to pursue my dreams and opened up new worlds of knowledge. Now, every time I hear of politicians doing something stupid to the oceans or rivers, I just shake my head and say "'Song' should be required reading for them before they can draft a piece of legislation dealing with the oceans."

Absolute poetry
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-06
I'm only about halfway through this book, but it's so moving that I decided I needed to rave now. Carl Safina uses an amazing grasp of language to paint mental pictures of what he writes about. I work in the scientific community and have spent a lot of time on that water, and his writings are not only objective and scientifically sound, he constructs them in such a way that they are beautiful. You will have a thirst for each topic and region of which he writes. I borrowed this book from the library and had vowed to buy it before I'd finished the first chapter. It has only improved as I've proceeded.

Environment and Nature
With Speed and Violence: Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change
Published in Paperback by Beacon Press (2008-03-03)
Author: Fred Pearce
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More Science, Less Politics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
"I have been on this beat for eighteen years now. The more I learn, the more I go see for myself, and the more I question scientists, the more scared I get."
-Fred Pearce

If this were what this book were about I wouldn't bother with it. But Pearce doesn't compromise science with politics. Pearce's alarmist comment is one that is set aside for the remainder of the book as he proceeds to give us the latest research in an evolving field. Skeptics will argue that no perspective is included. The difficulty is that everything we do has a purpose. When we build a city at a certain location we do so with reason. If we choose to build a farm the location is chosen with specific reason. The decisions we make are based on what we know of climate and environment in its relatively stable state - which is already limited. Human induced (anthropogenic) climate change will always disrupt the stable state - will also disrupt the purposes chosen for which we base our engineering decisions - and ultimately leave us without fulfillment of basic needs. Because of this, the more forthright skeptics can only play the role of devil's advocate while other skeptics rely on outright deception. In a world of competitive issues the attention that climate change receives is a function of its competition with every other issue. I believe calls for concern without skeptic perspective are most appropriate.

Pearce opens with historical and scientific briefings. Our knowledge of greenhouse gases is not new. It is rooted in physics that is verified. Innumerable records are being broken in weather recently. From here Pearce moves to bigger problems. The ocean conveyor may stop. Enormous climate changes appear to have been triggered with immediacy in the past. Large changes in climatic stability have been recorded with changes in the pulse stream of the sun that would only increase vulnerability to change.

I like "With Speed and Violence" for moving quickly and comprehensively between a number of topics. It is the most appropriate book on climate change for 2007.

Captivating vignettes of climate change in action around the world
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
The book is the best out of about a dozen that I've read recently on global warming. His vignettes, from traveling around the world to gather the news on the latest developments in climate science, are captivating. The book is very up-to-date on the science, and explains many of the crucial aspects of Earth that climate scientists don't yet understand well.

The book is also scary, because most of these things that we don't understand well--such as how ice sheets break up, or how melting permafrost releases large amounts of greenhouse gases--suggest that most assessments, such as IPCC's, are significantly underestimating the amount of change that global warming will reap. But until the scientists that Pearce talks to can sort things out, it's hard to know how bad it might get.

Unsettling
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
There is a lot out there on global warming and climate change. With Speed and Violence adds the aspect of urgency. Knowing that events could happen quickly jerks us from our complacency to the reality of the coming changes. A quick and absorbing read.

With Speed and Voilence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
This was a failry good comprehensive review of the many inputs to the climate concept/theory of global warming and it's concequences. Chapters were brief, to the point and lead the reader to other research avenues.

To Understand Climate Change (Fear/Concern), First Get to Know Tipping Points
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
The reason I became a climate change scientist is because of what I learned about climate tipping points. Until recently, I was an environmental scientist specializing in pollution prevention of toxic waste. Then I began to study global warming and climate change issues, and what I discovered about climate change tipping points was enough to cause me to change careers rather abruptly. For the earth to continue to be inhabitable, we must do all we can to lower greenhouse gas emissions to avoid tipping the planet into a vicious cycle of becoming warmer and warmer, with no cooling relief possible for thousands, if not millions of years. This book does an excellent job of describing what a climate tipping point is, and what will most likely happen unless we take action now.

The earth has undergone several drastic climate changes in the past, without any help from humanity, but this time around it looks like humans are the ones forcing the climate to become progressively warmer, and at a rate much faster than the earth and humanity can easily adapt to. Unless we can lower greenhouse gas emissions within the next generation, we must go to Plan B and start learning how to adapt to a drastically different, and far less comfortable world, one with flooded coastal cities, mega-droughts, and catastrophic crop failure. Let's hope that the leaders start to trust scientists on this subject, because all the scientists I know have a lot less reason to fabricate evidence than the typical business that sells coal, gasoline, cars, and electrical power, and would love to continue making large profits without having to change the way they do business.

Environment and Nature
Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, Third Edition
Published in Paperback by W. W. Norton (2008-01-16)
Author: Lester R. Brown
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Saving Civilization Won't Be This Easy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Lester Brown gives us a solid plan to save civilization from the ravages of Peak Oil and Global Warming. But at $190 billion a year, it just sounds too easy.

In fact Peak Oil is now becoming Peak Everything (the title of Richard Heinberg's latest book), driving huge price increases in many key commodities. This means that the actual cost is likely to become twice Brown's estimate or more, the longer we delay, the higher the price. To keep costs down will take a global mobilization, with many agreements like the proposed Oil Depletion Protocol (subject of another Heinberg book) and massive rationing or taxation of non-essential consumption.

One way or another global economic decline is in the offing. This is a scary issue, especially for politicians, but it needs to be faced. This is because there is a huge difference in how this decline occurs. Business-as-usual decline (Plan A) will lead to collapse, possibly by mid-century. Decline imposed through mobilization (Plan B) will lead to survival, though with far less of many of today's luxuries.

Here's how decline will hit home, even with mobilization. Brown, along with the Apollo Alliance and many others, are now talking about a new economy of "green collar" jobs, with re-localization of much outsourced productive activity. What they don't tell you is that most of these jobs will pay far less in real purchasing power than most white and blue collar jobs in today's top industries.

But good people will take these Walmart-pay type jobs anyway because of layoffs that will skyrocket in the coming decades. That is, today's wealth is based primarily on cheap energy, so with many more people competing there will a lot less wealth to go around as we head down the Peak. Much of Plan B amounts to learning how to live with less. Many of those who've looked carefully at the numbers don't see the resources to build and maintain the renewable energy we'd need to replace all of today's fossil fuels.

This brings up the population issue. Brown says that we must stabilize at eight billion people. But will we really have the resources for 8 billion people to live sustainably and with at least basic middle class amenities (decent food, clothing, housing, health care, education, transportation, ...)? Some people are now saying that we need to think two billion or less.

Radical population reduction seems impossible without invoking the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. But it's actually very simple in concept: Women have only one child, on the average, and that child is born in the woman's mid thirties, again on the average. Mathematically this will reduce the population by a factor of 4 in 80 to 100 years. Sure, this would take a global cultural mobilization, but it is possible. As Brown points out, Iran cut its population growth rate in half in less than a decade, and Thailand did too. Perhaps we need Al Gore to show the world the kind of Apocalypse that happens when an exploding population uses up all its resources.

a good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
This book does a good job of suggesting that the United States trims it's military budgets from the largest to a very slim one.

and demonstrates how necessary it is to move away from oil, thru the use of windmills and electric cars.

It does a good job of putting into laymans terms facts which most people do not consider in their daily grind, and how decisions made by super powers when it comes to (over)population levels, econimic models, and the environment must be addressed.

According to the book, every single member of the US Senate was given one copy hopefully they read it so they can grasp the issues discussed.

Plan B 3.0
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
The numbers don't lie. Lester Brown has presented a very informative synopsis of the most pressing issues facing our planet. The trends are all pointing in the wrong direction as far as the environment. He does offer an extremely innovative solution to get us back on a sustainable path. The scary thing is the narrow window of time in which we have to make some monumental changes in the way that we live. This is especially true for us Americans. We need to realize that there are another 6+billion people on the planet and that we all can not consume and waste as Americans collectively do. Great job Lester. I bought 8 copies of the book, which I never done before in my life to circulate to people to get the word out. Buy this book, you will not regret it.

exhaustive and detail oriented
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
This is a difficult book to get wrapped around. Which is good news, and then again it is bad news.

The good news is that this is an excellent and wide-sweeping run-up to the current health of our Earth.

Such topics as Our Socially Divided World, Eradicating Poverty, Designing Cities For People, and The Great Mobilization are spread over 287 pages of dense statistics and research, backed up by nearly another 100 pages of footnotes.

The bad news? There is far more content than is of interest to me - the motivated renewable energy reader. Some day I will wade through the less interesting parts, and then leave the remainder as a source reference.

The book cover heralds "REVISED AND EXPANDED". Actually, I would have preferred the less-is-more previous edition.

If you don't believe we are all in for some serious challenges...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
Then you must read this book. It clearly lays how mankind is on the road to ruin if we don't change our ways and the U.S. is no ways immune. It is hopeful also to read about tangible plans on how we can change our ways and build a world for all of us to thrive in, maybe compramising just a little bit for the better well-being of all of us. The book is extremely well writting and the documentation of sources is impressive. My only complaint is that some of it is unessecarily redundant, but I don't blame the author for trying to hit home key points. Anyone with any concern for the future needs to read this book, and take some action, even if just a little.

Environment and Nature
Gaia Girls Enter the Earth (Gaia Girls)
Published in Paperback by Daisyworld Press (2007-06-13)
Author: Lee Welles
List price: $12.95
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Average review score:

Simple, powerful and addictive
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
As a 30 year old I was hooked by this book geared towards a younger crowd. I love reading good YA and this is up there on my list. It wasn't preachy and had some great characters who were well rounded. I am totally hooked and can't wait to read the rest of the series. :)

Thank You Thank You Thank You!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Thank you thank you thank you to the author, illustrator and publishers of this book!!! My daughter is 10 years old and absolutely loves it. She loves to read but can be very picky about books! We happened to be at the Boston Museum of Science when the author was there and my daughter had to have a signed copy after talking to Lee Welles for a few minutes. We are very eco-concerned and I am glad to see a book that really relates to this generations problems and the fact that they really do need to start getting involved and getting there friends involved in fixing the situation NOW!!! SO again THANK YOU!!! I truly believe that this book may help a lot of young adults step up and make a difference!

FANTASTIC BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
My daughter (age 11) just loved the book. She felt it was very suspenseful and can't wait til she reads the next one. In this book, Harmony Farms creates a town disagreement in Avon by changing everyone's opinions on farming. Elizabeth's special powers help her when she needs them the most. Great book and keep up the good work, Lee Welles!

My Favorite Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-26
I have to agree with everyones comment about how wonderfully this book was written for all ages. My Grandma and I are a living example of how a young and older reader loved and enjoyed this book.

I Love this book and I hope their are many other people out there that agree.
I hope one day this book turns into a movie, that would be really cool.

Keep up the great work Welles!

Enter The Earth
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
Elizabeth Angier is a fourth-grader who lives on a farm. She helps her parents weed the large vegetable garden, dye skeins of wool from their sheep, arrange wildflowers into bouquets to be sold at the farmers' market, and water the saplings that landscapers buy. Will, the high school boy from the dairy farm over the hill, comes over to help her dad on occasion. Elizabeth loves everything about growing up on the farm that has been in her father's family for many generations. But all this threatens to change: a company that runs "CAFO" (Concentrated Feeding Animal Organizations) pig farms arrives to woo struggling farmers into selling their farms and taking jobs with the large corporation. As Elizabeth's parents desperately research the effects of existing CAFO's on a community's air, water, commerce, and quality of life, Elizabeth herself discovers her own connection to the earth and the powers that gives her. Gaia, the spirit of the Earth, appears to her as an otter, and begins to teach her.

That's just a brief synopsis of Gaia Girls: Enter the Earth, recent winner of the 2006 National Outdoor Book Award, children's division. Although this is a fantastical novel that author Lee Welles has written for children ("ages 9 and up"), many parts of the story ring true for communities like ours. Gaia Girls: Enter the Earth takes place on a farm in upstate New York, near the Finger Lakes. Much of it reads like home, the beauty as well as the struggles.

Although I consider myself sympathetic to environmental activists, I am leary of being lumped in with folks who wear hemp and eat vegetarian because it's trendy. In sitting down to read Gaia Girls, I was a little afraid that the story would be heavy-handed on earth goddesses but skim over the true difficulties of living environmentally-aware. I am pleased to report I couldn't have been more wrong. "Three Oaks Farm" is an organic farm, but Welles makes it clear that this makes the Angier family and their products unusual for their community. They need to be very creative to be successful: they advertise their organic produce to upscale restaurants, who pre-order from the farm. Another way they make money is by selling many different products: wool, vegetables, flowers, young trees, honey. Though Elizabeth and her parents feel they live a happy life in a corner of paradise, Welles doesn't flinch from showing how fragile that existence is, and how much work it takes to maintain it.

Welles' writing is strong. At the beginning, I was reminded of Charlotte's Web. As I continued to read Gaia Girls, I realized I was in the middle of a wonderful new literary phenomenon. I see this book, and the series to follow, touching many as it touched me. Enter the Earth reminded me of environmental issues and earth science facts that I already know about, but made me feel more attached to them. Without being preachy, Gaia Girls helps the reader see the science behind farming methods that are good for the earth, and how it is healthy for the people who live there and those of us who eat the food grown there. With Elizabeth, we can connect to the farm, as she and the farm connect to the earth. I raced through the book, loved the story, and can't wait for more.

Author of "Hobo Finds A Home" and editor of "A Predatory Heart"

Environment and Nature
Natural Remodeling for the Not-So-Green House: Bringing Your Home into Harmony with Nature (Natural Home & Garden)
Published in Paperback by Lark Books (2006-06-28)
Authors: Carol Venolia and Kelly Lerner
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Textbook potential
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03
I've been teaching at a community college for 16 years on the topic of energy efficiency, Passive solar, Building Science, green building, healthy home and alternative structures. These fields have evolved over this period of time. During the past 5 years there have been many good books on new construction, but few on Remodeling.

Since remodeling would recycle a whole building, it is "greener" than new construction, especially in Suburbia or rural agricultural land. I would like to emphasize Remodeling in community colleges and think this would be the best textbook on the subject. The photographs alone are worthwhile. I also own the book, "Green Remodeling" by David Johnston and would use it as a secondary reference.

I would also recommend Natural Remodeling for homeowners.

Read this book before remodeling.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
This is an outstanding book on remodeling your home to blend in with nature, and to avoid introducing toxic products into your home. Great ideas and photos.

Go get it! You will love it!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
And I am glad I did! I am even gladder to know that more people are waking up to the idea of natural remodeling. I am not sure whether it alone will save our earth but it's a good start. If enough people do it, it will certainly raise the level of our appreciation of nature to a higher level.

We're in the process of buying a house. Having been brainwashed by the mainstream culture and the media, I had grand dreams of huge expansion with piles of the latest and the biggest "goods" we're all programmed to consume - things like an all powerful over sized profession stainless oven even though I would never use it. But I now have a completely different mind set after reading this book.

We've decided to go small and practical and recycle, reuse as much as possible. Let mother Nature live so that we can too!

PERFECTION!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
I could not put this book down. It answers all of my questions and concerns as I begin to contemplate the large undertaking of creating a healthy, eco-friendly home for our family. Very thorough, creative and well-written... I only wish I could hire these women directly. Just enough information to cover all of the key considerations, with plenty of guidance on how to dig deeper if necessary. Should be required reading for every builder on the planet!

good ideas
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-01
There were many good ideas in this book. Some more expensive than the average person could afford. I read Building Green: A Complete How-To Guide to Alternative Building Methods Earth Plaster * Straw Bale * Cordwood * Cob * Living Roofs; By: Clarke Snell (Author), Tim Callahan (Author). Which was very comprehensive and enjoyable. While Snell and Callahan focus on building from scratch I was more interested at this moment in remodeling. I wouldn't dismiss this book, but I would identify what your needs are first.


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