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467 reviews for:
The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where to Go from Here
Hope Jahren
467 reviews for:
The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where to Go from Here
Hope Jahren
I think this is a really important book, and made me think about how I can live my life in a better way for the planet.
Packed with meaningful data and given a very relatable contextual framing of change over one person's lifetime. A little tonally muddled in relation to sustainable solutions.
I wanna learn this book by heart and smack it to the face of any climate change deniers.
Nice high level approach to economic and ecologic behavior without much in the way of useful advice, other than hope.
3.5
okay writing, not my fave, but I want to join the climate revolution now so that’s something
okay writing, not my fave, but I want to join the climate revolution now so that’s something
medium-paced
informative
reflective
medium-paced
Easy to read, but I wanted more depth in a lot of places, which I think is a downfall of the scope and global nature of the book. Jahren’s writing is very engaging.
This is the first climate book I was able to get through. Books about climate change faces the unique challenge of walking the thin line between hope and despair, between statistics and real life, and between the big societal picture and the individual action. This book manages to find the correct balance that draws me in, teaches me something new, puts it in perspective, and proposes possible solutions.
The Story of More provides a good overview of how far the world came in the last 50 years (the author repeats, she was born in 1969), looking at the human population, our consumption of food and energy, our creation of waste, our animal companions, the environment, and so on. Huge, unfathomable numbers (however many billion tons of who and the what now) are broken down into per capita numbers that are more relatable (the amount of garbage we generate on average, per person, relative to our own weights). Woven through the statistics are the author’s own anecdotes from childhood - how the weather has changed, how she was connected to the land as a child - and that brings forth the little changes I’ve noticed and brushed off myself.
The book ultimately takes an individual-first approach. If we all reduce consumption, the author posits, there is hope. While the individual effort is surely not futile, I struggle to see how it can be enough. Redistribution of goods may solve world hunger, but there are still a few steps, or, dare I say, *cliffs* to surmount before excess goods can be distributed equitably rather than just being turned for a profit some other way.
The Story of More tells one piece of the puzzle of climate change, that, in my opinion, ought to be supplemented with other readings, but it does a good job of telling the story it set out to tell.
The Story of More provides a good overview of how far the world came in the last 50 years (the author repeats, she was born in 1969), looking at the human population, our consumption of food and energy, our creation of waste, our animal companions, the environment, and so on. Huge, unfathomable numbers (however many billion tons of who and the what now) are broken down into per capita numbers that are more relatable (the amount of garbage we generate on average, per person, relative to our own weights). Woven through the statistics are the author’s own anecdotes from childhood - how the weather has changed, how she was connected to the land as a child - and that brings forth the little changes I’ve noticed and brushed off myself.
The book ultimately takes an individual-first approach. If we all reduce consumption, the author posits, there is hope. While the individual effort is surely not futile, I struggle to see how it can be enough. Redistribution of goods may solve world hunger, but there are still a few steps, or, dare I say, *cliffs* to surmount before excess goods can be distributed equitably rather than just being turned for a profit some other way.
The Story of More tells one piece of the puzzle of climate change, that, in my opinion, ought to be supplemented with other readings, but it does a good job of telling the story it set out to tell.
Super depressing. The last bit of the book Jahren talked about hope and making a plan to consume less energy that matches my own values and high concerns. That last chapter helped a lot but I was in deep depression before it.
My review: https://headfullofbooks.blogspot.com/2022/01/review-and-quotes-story-of-more.html
My review: https://headfullofbooks.blogspot.com/2022/01/review-and-quotes-story-of-more.html
Hope Jahren writes a wide-ranging book (population, gender, ethics, consumption, emigration/migration, urbanization, economics, food production, energy use, global warming, and the like) that includes a lot of autobiographical references, heightening the personal interest in what could otherwise be a very depressing and dry narrative. Thankfully, she also writes clearly and engagingly. I enjoyed her use of puns and other wry humor to give a sharper edge to some of her points. For example, "These days it is exceptionally rare for an American to meet her meat." "Spam was invented in my home town." "At present, we are choosing ourselves over our own grandchildren three times a day...." "I hate cars more than the Devil hates Jesus." There are occasionally puzzling omissions (e.g., no reference to Fukushima in the section on nuclear energy).
Overall, it is a positive and easy-to-read contribution to the conversation about what to do to decrease and mitigate our negative impact on the planet.
My favorite chapter was "The Difference You Make," which builds in practical ways on Jahren's constant mantra about lowering our impact (electricity use, etc.) to something approximating the average of 1965 Switzerland.
Overall, it is a positive and easy-to-read contribution to the conversation about what to do to decrease and mitigate our negative impact on the planet.
My favorite chapter was "The Difference You Make," which builds in practical ways on Jahren's constant mantra about lowering our impact (electricity use, etc.) to something approximating the average of 1965 Switzerland.