Elkington has some good ideas about how businesses can change to become more sustainable, but his pompous writing style and disorganized structure completely undermines the coherence of the book. "Cannibals With Forks" is grueling to read; every chapter is filled with presumptive arguments ("We WILL see this happen...") and annoying scientific analogies ("shear zones," "superconductors," etc.). Elkington tries to structure the book like a high-school textbook, with fancy graphics and big, bold headings, but the structure of the arguments follows no logical pattern and makes the book very difficult to read. Elkington does not build towards a conclusion; he simply beats the same problems to death over and over again. Our environmental studies class at UW - Madison read this book in its entirety and every one of us was sick of it by the end of Chapter 6; enough so that the instructor decided to remove the book from the class reading list next year. An interested reader would be better off reading "The Ecology of Commerce" by Paul Hawken; as it is infinitely more compelling and logical.