I think this book is essential reading for people who know something about climate change and agree that they need to reduce their "carbon footprint". I thought I was doing that, but this book revealed "the environmental impact" I did not know I have. I highly recommend it for anyone who wants to know more but who prefers to read fiction.
While this book may be familiar turf to those immersed in fighting our ecocide, for the average person (like me) who considers himself or herself to be "educated" about the environment each page is a revelation.
Schlossberg demonstrates in (mostly) elegant prose so many issues I had never heard of before. One little tidbit only is:
"Our actions and the problems they create are connected, all around the world. Goats in the Mongolian desert add to air pollution in California; throwing away a computer helps create an illegal economy that makes people sick in Ghana......." (page 233).
I could go on at length. The most important thing the book accomplishes is a breathtakingly broad scope at how many of our actions and our purchases contribute to the single biggest problem on earth today. Schlossberg also offers great narratives about items as diverse as aquaculture, , blue jeans, packaging and shipping, justice, and Mongolian goats. It's all connected.
As an English teacher, I've vainly sent out books of poetry to friends and family for decades. Now this is the one book I think is more essential for us right NOW than _Hamlet_ or _Paradise Lost_. Holiday gift alert!
I've been distressed by the paucity of talk about climate change thus far in our election cycle.
I've glanced at other reviews here and I think that the book has been marked down by some reviewers for the author's sense of humour and asides. While Schlossberg does not have David Sedaris levels of wit, she does have the most crucial topic of our age which transcends issues of style. I would not hesitate to put her and her book into the same category as the major works of Rachel Carson, Al Gore, Naomi Klein, and Amitav Ghosh, among others. The footnotes seem impeccable; I did wish for an index. If you are impressed by the work of Greta Thunberg, then you will learn from this book.
Near the end of the book the author says: "We have to vote....for people who offer meaningful policies and make sure they are achieved." Yes, we must.