Book cover of The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet

Book description

INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!
NATIONAL BESTSELLER

Most Anticipated Book by The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times A Next Big Idea Book Club Selection The New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice

Jeff Goodell's "masterful, bracing" (David Wallace-Wells) investigation exposes "through stellar reporting, artful storytelling…

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Why read it?

5 authors picked The Heat Will Kill You First as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

I am a huge fan of this book because of how it doesn’t pull any punches and gets real about how bad the climate crisis really is.

Goodell provides a detailed description of the dangers that extreme heat poses to humans in a well written way. When you read this book, you understand how apocalyptic our future is likely to be. 

Do you want nightmares? Like actual nightmares? Like wake-you-up with heart palpitations in middle of the night nightmares? Well-told nightmares? Freakish worry nightmares? Well belly up on to this book and enjoy the end of the world.

Where Wallace-Wells’ book lays out the big picture, Goodell’s book gets us up close and personal with the core danger of climate change: unsurvivable heat.

I felt like I could see and feel the presence of this life-threatening force as if it were a malevolent demon in a horror movie, yet I also came away from the book with a deeper scientific understanding of the harms of using fossil fuels. Such a good read!

From Genevieve's list on understand climate change.

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Book cover of Against the Seas: Saving Civilizations from Rising Waters

Against the Seas by Mary Soderstrom,

The scenario we are facing is scary: within a few decades, sea levels around the world may well rise by a metre or more as glaciers and ice caps melt due to climate change. Large parts of our coastal cities will be flooded, the basic outline of our world will…

I love the breadth and depth of reporting in this book—how Jeff Goodell ties together a vast array of consequences, some already catastrophic, of Earth’s rising temperature. He traveled the world and spoke to countless people, from scientists to undocumented farm workers, telling stories of tragedy and hope.

You will finish it astounded at how human health and civilization are webbed to temperature—and how we are unraveling the fabric of our own survival.

I read a lot of apocalyptic science fiction, but this is a scarily well-written apocalyptic fact. Jeff writes about a terrifyingly relevant topic today: the heating of the planet.

This is something most of us do not understand at a visceral level. Jeff does a brilliant job using anecdotes, statistics, and just plain great storytelling to describe what happens to humanity in a world where temperatures are inexorably climbing. It is like a punch in the gut and puts the story of a “frog in a slowly boiling pot” into a whole new context.

I have personally changed a lot…

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Book cover of Against the Seas: Saving Civilizations from Rising Waters

Against the Seas by Mary Soderstrom,

The scenario we are facing is scary: within a few decades, sea levels around the world may well rise by a metre or more as glaciers and ice caps melt due to climate change. Large parts of our coastal cities will be flooded, the basic outline of our world will…

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