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tophat8855's review against another edition
4.0
A beautifully written nonfiction book about the world under our feet: the mythical, the geological, the burial. It covers spelunking, graves, early humans and humanoids, the ghosts of the Holocaust, the melting of the permafrost of the arctic circle, drilling of oil, the burial of nuclear waste, etc. It's wide-reaching for a topic that seems very small, but only because we don't think about what's under us.
It's a warning of climate change and the harm humans do to each other, but also an dive in humanity's sense of exploration. I would recommend if you're looking for an easy-to-listen-to nonfiction book.
Listened via Hoopla
It's a warning of climate change and the harm humans do to each other, but also an dive in humanity's sense of exploration. I would recommend if you're looking for an easy-to-listen-to nonfiction book.
Listened via Hoopla
hewlettelaine's review against another edition
5.0
Absolutely adored this book. Profound writing about the world beneath our feet - cave systems, water courses, glaciers, catacombs and living systems. It's also about the distortion of time under the ground and how that impacts on us - the discussion about plans on how to communicate the hazards of deeply buried highly radioactive waste to long-distant future generations was especially sobering. Highly, highly recommend!
suebrownreads's review against another edition
4.0
I had a hard time deciding a 3 or a 4 for this book. I listened to it, and it would probably have been better if I had read a hard copy. The first three hours were not very enjoyable as I really had no interest in caving exploits, and I had already read Suzanne Simards work as well as Robin Kimmerer. Once he got into the Catacombs of Paris, it got more interesting and I enjoyed the rest of the book. I do have a complaint about the author going off on tangents and then coming back to wherever he was before he went off in another direction. Overall, it is informative, and covers global warming in the area of glaciers and he also covers the storage of nuclear waste which is terrifying to me.
aberdeenwaters's review against another edition
5.0
A beautifully written exploration of the worlds beneath our feet. He has such a way with describing nature, especially nature we don't see everyday. He connects history, geology, past, and present in a readable way. I really enjoyed this.
sarahrashmi's review against another edition
adventurous
emotional
informative
inspiring
reflective
slow-paced
4.75
The audiobook is fantastic
ovenbird_reads's review against another edition
5.0
Beautiful. It took me forever to read. It's a long book but also one that required a slow, deep read. Unsurprising given the themes!
papelgren's review
5.0
A masterpiece. Takes you places you will most likely never go. The prose is elegant and precise and gorgeous.