Reviews

The Climate Book: The Facts and the Solutions by Greta Thunberg

charina_i's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.0

leannesteph's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative inspiring medium-paced

4.5

lnt's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

The book is a collection of essays from a lot of distinguished scientists, from many fields. It looks into what got us in the climate crisis in the first place, things that we have already done, that we're doing, and that we should be doing in the future. Ways to connect this crisis with others, including social or inequality.
It is easy to read, it is easy to use it for future references, and most notably, if you feel that a scientist's view is more interesting and you need to read more of it, each chapter has their name first, so that you could dive more into their research.
Greta did an amazing job reaching out to all these people for the creation of the book.

whatchareadingheather's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

THIS NEEDS TO BE REQUIRED READING FOR LITERALLY EVERYONE!

purpledragonfly9's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging dark hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.5

milo10000's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative slow-paced

3.25

Lots of good information, but the inconsistent writing styles between the many different authors make it a little challenging to read all the way through as a unit. It's very valuable as a reference book though. My biggest complaint is that it's printed in grayscale and many of the graphs and charts need to be in color to make sense. The black text on dark gray background for Greta's parts are also hard to read in less than full light. My highlight was the final non-Greta section, written by Robin Wall Kimmerer, which was heartbreaking and inspiring.

emberley's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging dark informative reflective sad fast-paced

5.0

I wish everyone cared about this stuff. Get some anti-depressants ready

qls's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

maybe the most important book of our generation?
should be required reading for *everyone*.

spyralnode's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

5.0

'The Climate Book' should be mandatory reading for everyone, wherever you are, whatever you do, whoever you are. It should be part of our school curriculums, of our education systems. Greta Thunberg has created a remarkable compendium of essays, photos and data on climate change that come not only from her, but from many other subjects matter experts, from scientists, activists, authors and world leaders.

It's structured in chronological parts:
1/ How Climate Works
2/ How Our Planet Is Changing
3/ How It Affects Us
4/ What We've Done About It
5/ What We Must Do Now

These essays are fairly short, ranging between 2 and 5 pages, accessible, informative and engaging. Interspersed between them are also Greta's opinion pieces, which I read as more of a call to action as you process the data you have been presented with. She brings you back to the reality of today and reiterates in simply terms the constraints our systems presents and what is still in our power. And that is one of the main things I really loved about this book: it is genuinely for everyone. There is nothing fancy about it that would make it unapproachable. The natural phenomena, the political and economical systems, the correlations and consequences are well explained. 

My response to the read was angry: Am I surrounded by idiots? Why are people not taking action? How can people around me be so complacent and selfish, not see the forest through the trees? The urgency is here, it's now, it's not going anywhere. On the contrary: warming of over 2C will have devastating consequences. The change in our environmental damages today has already caused irreparable damage in people being displaced, vulnerable food production, an increase in natural disasters, yet the actions that governments take are abysmal. Not only that, but they don't even report on the whole picture. International flights and shipping, as well as military costs, are not part of how they calculate the emissions of countries. Waste management is outsourced to countries with less regulation (for example the UK sending their waste to Turkey), where plastic sits on beaches, in forests, or has been burned to create more CO2. People revel in their beef steaks and burgers, with a forest the size of a football field disappearing every second due to the resources that beef needs: 50 calories for every calorie produced. Biodiversity has suffered immensely, and with oceans increasing in temperature and therefore acidity, it's sending fish to the poles and threatens their ability to birth.

The contributors place blame especially on the media and governments and I couldn't agree more. Our structures are built with people in power, yet they are ridiculously uninformed or choose to ignore the urgency of our planet falling apart and no longer able to sustain us. Media has long served as the loudspeakers of companies in the oil and gas industry, with BP for example placing the responsibility on the individuals by popularising the term of 'carbon footprint' and urging people to calculate their own in order to address it. But we cannot be sustainable in unsustainable systems.

The book does maintain a hopeful outlook - realistic but hopeful. There is a myriad of advice on what we can do, even if we are limited without the enforcement of laws that helds those responsible for ecocide accountable. Eating more plants, limiting our consumables, keeping our politicians accountable, travelling less by plane, educating ourselves, becoming activists, these are all things we can do today. Humans are social creatures, and history have shown protests turning things around with a 2.5% participation from the people.  

I couldn't recommend this book more. I read it continuously, I know others choose to read an essay a day. But even though I was deeply affected and angry, I wanted to keep going. I wanted to know more, understand better, fuel my anger towards education and consequently action. I want to do more, I want to be better in living in harmony with the world around me. 

Last but certainly not least, I admire the honesty of this book immensely. It raises the alarm effectively, and also addresses intersectional areas, such as how the poorest are the most impacted by climate change, yet it is caused primarily by the top 1%. They continue to act irresponsibly and also take advantage of the Global South, while no longer under the colony model, by hiring cheap labor in countries like Bangladesh, for further use of resources, production of unneeded goods that will soon be discarded, and of course exploitation of people. 

We must take action now.

adelheid's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative medium-paced

4.0