Climate Crisis Books
Storms of my Grandchildren
by David Keith (2013)
This book, by a Canadian physicist who is now at Harvard University, addresses the critical topic of solar radiation management (SRM) – the original term for climate engineering.
Read MoreA History of the Science and Politics of Climate Change
by Peter Wadhams (2017)
Wadhams is an Arctic expert at the University of Cambridge. This book summarizes his scientific observations after numerous field trips over many decades.
Read MoreGreen Illusions
by Peter Wadhams (2017)
Wadhams is an Arctic expert at the University of Cambridge. This book summarizes his scientific observations after numerous field trips over many decades.
Read MoreHumanity’s Descent: The Consequences of Ecological Instability
by Rick Potts (1996)
Potts asserts that humankind’s core attributes arose from environmental instability: the climatic and other alterations that produced a flexible, general-purpose brain capable of modifying its habitats to increase its survival chances.
Read MoreA Farewell to Ice
by Peter Wadhams (2017)
Wadhams is an Arctic expert at the University of Cambridge. This book summarizes his scientific observations after numerous field trips over many decades.
Read MoreA Case for Climate Engineering
by David Keith (2013)
This book, by a Canadian physicist who is now at Harvard University, addresses the critical topic of solar radiation management (SRM) – the original term for climate engineering.
Read MoreA Short History of Progress
by Ronald Wright (2004)
In this brief but highly readable book, Wright asserts that material progress is a trap that invites our species to over-expand, foul our environmental nests, and trigger an ecological crisis.
Read MoreThe Discovery of Global Warming
by Spencer R. Weart (2003)
Weart’s book is useful not only for its historical perspective on global warming, but also because it provides three crucial insights.
Read MoreEcotopia
by Ernest Callenbach (1975)
It is 20 years since Ecotopia – the territory occupied by Washington state, Oregon, and northern California – seceded from the United States because of the environmental crisis.
Read MoreThe Limits to Growth
by Donella H. Meadows, et al. (1972)
Should humankind survive the ecological crisis, future generations will look back on this book with the sad realization that we were unambiguously warned about the Earth’s ecological constraints.
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