It is strange when you read a book with a title like Warmth but you get so little of it. And when you get it, it comes with a name that represents a variety of things: "the Problem". Climate change, depletion of natural and finite goods, destruction of nature, corporate greed, etc, etc, etc? Actually, Sherrel decides to use a group of chosen words to mean a whole bunch of things, just like "The Dream". Or "Pruitt" like the evil itself.
Having trouble making sense of nowadays's constant need to create theories/words for every single move we make, I believe that when we use a collective word to mean a whole bunch of things and people, we end up causing more damage in our pursuit of finding solutions to solve the stinking messy shit we humans do. It impoverishes language and it centers the goals on abstract ideas/people, leaving aside the rest of the evil in peace, let alone not looking at the man/woman in the mirror. It is as when we say "corruption" and think of politicians and corporate greed alone, but we forget to look at the mirror and see our small acts of corruption that deplete the sense of common good as well.
The only part of the book I enjoyed more or less was while staying in Australia and visiting the town of Broome, he learns so much with the Goolarabooloo clan, the Aboriginal family that takes care of the particular stretch of coastline that is their land, but whose governor of the state tried to sell away to oil conglomerates. Here, Sherrel has the best lesson he could ever achieve, away from his native America: to see the world through other eyes, to learn that grieving doesn't answer our need to fight, harder and harder; that when we say that we come of age at the end of our world, we have already given up any hope and planet Melancholia is on its way back after a fly-by.
Last, it shocked me that Sherrel could bring about Coase's externalities, but failed to even come close to mentioning the design principles of stable local common pool resource management identified by Elinor Ostrom and her work on environmental protection.