Earth Under Fire: How Global Warming Is Changing the World
Gary Braasch. University of California Press, $45 (267pp) ISBN 978-0-520-24438-2
Photojournalist and author Braasch (Photographing the Patterns of Nature) uses his award-winning skill behind the camera to produce a practical, level-headed and thorough overview of the current state of global warming, from a ground-level definition to stunning images of its effects: villages swept away by encroaching water, immigrating plant populations, disappearing glaciers and decimated habitats. Braasch discusses rationally the current and future impact of global warming-showing how ""the earth is becoming a different planet as the ice withdraws""-bolstering statistics such as ""Americans spend $450,000 a minute on imported oil"" and ""634 million people are no more than 33 feet above sea level"" with well-informed text, charts, maps and sidebars from scholars and activists. The last third is devoted to ""choosing a safer, cleaner, and cooler world,"" looking at how renewable fuels, energy conservation and efficiency, green building standards and local eating have a real impact on the planet's health. Happily, Braasch's view is hopeful, even when contemplating the world without us: ""life will go on in some form whether or not coral reefs or rainforests exist, or whether atmospheric oxygen is reduced by half or carbon dioxide quadrupled."" Color illus.
Details
Reviewed on: 10/01/2007
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 304 pages - 978-0-520-94393-3
Open Ebook - 295 pages - 978-0-520-93184-8