4.5
informative reflective fast-paced

4.5⭐ on 🎧

A good primer to thinking about how environmental movements impact BIPOC and other minority communities disproportionately. As someone who lived in New Orleans for several years, the discussion of how black communities were impacted more after Hurricane Katrina felt especially poignant. However, I wish that Leah had dug into stories like this and sources that create them with more depth because this book felt more like a story of why intersectionality was important vs intersectional environmental factors. 

A great start for anyone trying to learn more about how their actions to create a greener future need to consider all people, not just the majority. Would recommend if you loved Aja Barber's Consumed!