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Fire and Flood

A People's History of Climate Change, from 1979 to the Present

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Brought to you by Penguin.
In 1979, President Jimmy Carter was presented with the findings of scientists who had been investigating whether human activities might change the climate in harmful ways. "A wait-and-see policy may mean waiting until it is too late," their report said. They were right — but no one was listening. Four decades later, we are haunted by the consequences of this inattention, and the years of complacency, obfuscation and denialism that followed. Today, the staggering scale and scope of what we have done to the planet is impossible to ignore: the seasons of fire and flood have crossed into plain view.
Fire and Flood is a comprehensive, compulsively readable history of climate change from veteran environmental journalist Eugene Linden. Linden retells the story of the modern climate change era decade by decade, tracking the progress of four ticking clocks: first, the reality of climate change itself; second, advances in scientific understanding; third, the spread of public awareness; and fourth, the business and finance response. Like no previous writer, Linden has drawn together the elements of the biggest story in the world, in a book that it is gripping as history, as economic investigation, and as scientific thriller.
© Eugene Linden 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Is a scientifically authoritative yet emotionally calm narrator essential for guiding listeners through a planet's climate apocalypse? Most definitely yes, and Paul Bellantoni's narration makes this audiobook an engaging way to learn what seems like everything about climate science. Bellantoni would even make this work fun except that each chapter hurtles listeners closer to an understanding of planetary doom. While the politics and policy decisions of climate change are the backbone of the material, the work also provides fascinating examples of climate science, which Bellantoni imparts at a fast pace. This is a good option for a book about global warming because it covers more than a century of energy choices. J.T. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 14, 2022
      Journalist Linden (The Winds of Change) pulls no punches in this urgent look at the causes and progression of climate change, the science that proved its existence, and what could have been done to mitigate it. He begins in the 1980s, when “the rise in global temperatures first began to separate itself from the noise of annual variations,” and continues up through the 2010s, which saw the first “widespread public alarm” over climate change, showing in meticulous detail how today’s climate reckoning stems from government failures in the United States and elsewhere, missed opportunities (notably the decisions by China and India to fuel their economic growth with coal rather than renewable energy), and from outright misinformation. Despite promising growth trends for green energy sources, Linden is pessimistic that the U.S., with its priorities on profit, can facilitate the collective action necessary to avoid disaster. The outlook here is bleak and sobering: “Through our ingenuity, adaptability, and greed,” he writes, “we have created a trap for ourselves.” The result is a damning account of the climate crisis. Agent: Esther Newberg, Curtis Brown.

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  • English

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