Bear with me here...
15 years or so ago, while at university, I was lucky enough to be part of a holistic threat assessment project meant to predict the health status and stability of individual cities across the world. Towards the end of this book, Hanson reminded me of this project. Back then, we tried to account for natural phenomena in addition to the traditionally encompassed geopolitical, demographic, and socioeconomic metrics. As, now, does the U.N., Hanson talks about climate change as a threat multiplier - both for humans and for other animals.
In "Hurricane Lizards and Plastic Squid," he illustrates this through fascinating anecdotes and quick run-downs of how nature adjusts - or fails to adjust - to climate change. It's a mix of "that is so cool" moments and abject horror at what's already happened. Now, he doesn't really add anything new in the grand scheme of things. Rather, his strength here can be found in his showing tiny examples of what has already happened to illustrate the greater issues. And he does it all in a way that is incredibly enjoyable an congenial.
As my experience did for me 15 years ago, Hanson also opens the reader's eyes to how, perhaps, we're not seeing the big picture of the threats we're facing, because we're focusing so much on the big picture. Yeah, I know, it's contradictory to say the least, but it makes sense - trust me, or read the book!
He also makes a great case for prioritization, and the need for a solid and informed foundation for that prioritization. Similarly, while this isn't so much a book on climate change per se, nor is it a book on anthropogenic climate change, Hanson definitely manages to pack in some solid advise about how we can begin to face it. And, he reminds us that humans too have adapted to climate change in the past and that, this time, we are in a position to make informed and meaningful decisions - individual and collective - that can both help and harm other species. We, too, are threat multipliers.
Most of all though, this is a book written by a biologist that absolutely loves what he's doing. And as much as he is worried and sometimes scared about the changes he discusses in the book, he also thinks they are really cool. He's endlessly fascinated by and with the ingenuity and adaptability of nature. As much as he'd rather not see the changes he writes about, he just can't help himself; like a kid in the candy-store, he just can't tear himself away. If climate change is the proverbial train wreck, Hanson's lookie-looing his way towards doomsday.
It's a fun and surprisingly lighthearted read about a global ecological system on the precipice. Maybe it doesn't add much for an informed reader, but I found it interesting nonetheless. Recommended