informative reflective medium-paced
challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced
hopeful informative reflective sad slow-paced
dark emotional hopeful informative reflective sad medium-paced
emotional informative medium-paced
medium-paced
challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced

Thought-provoking, sobering, extremely well written. May or may not be causing me a minor climate freak out 
dark informative slow-paced

An unpleasant read because climate migration is a scary reality to face. Humanizing stories about climate victims, terrifying stats, and reframing of political issues. This will change my future decisions on whether to live.
challenging informative reflective sad medium-paced
informative reflective slow-paced

I just could not with this book. It offered nothing new. I was hoping for a future-looking read talking about how the planet and our country will change as climate change worsens. Instead this was focused on past climate events like the Camp Fire in CA and Hurricane Katrina in NOLA. All of these events are horrific but I already know what happened and this just droned on and on. If you have your head in the sand regarding extreme weather events this book might be for you. But don’t expect any analysis on what we can do to prepare, how the weather patterns will change in different areas, where everyone will go, etc. This was all left to the last chapter. I also have to say that I am extremely biased and bitter because I am one of those millennials that may never own a home so it’s hard to hear about whole communities that refuse to move after their houses get destroyed over and over. I am trying to be more empathetic to their position; it’s home, it’s their community. But I feel like everyone is in such denial about the reality of climate change and the waste makes me angry.