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Last Generation - How Nature Will Take Her Revenge for Climate Change [Paperback]

Fred Pearce
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1 Jan 2007
Climate change is not a matter of gradually increasing temperatures. New scientific findings about how our planet works show that it does not do gradual change. Under pressure, it lurches into another mode of operation. Man-made global warming is on the verge of unleashing unstoppable planetary forces. Biological and geological monsters are being woken, and they will consume us. Virtually overnight Nature's revenge will be sudden and brutal, like a climatic tsunami sweeping across the globe. No question, we are the last generation to live with any kind of climatic stability. In this impassioned report, Fred Pearce travels the world on the story to end them all. Most troubling, while visiting the places where the action may start: deep in the Amazon, high in the Arctic and among the bogs of Siberia, he uncovers the first signs that nature's revenge is already under way.


Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Eden Project Books (1 Jan 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1903919886
  • ISBN-13: 978-1903919880
  • Product Dimensions: 13.2 x 20 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 568,174 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

...[S]uperbly explains and dramatizes both the causes and consequences of climate change. One reads it both gripped and deeply alarmed -- Robert Macfarlane

Coherent and highly readable…Pearce has sounded the final warning…This book is a call to action we dare not ignore -- The Rt Hon John Gummer MP

He is a sceptic of the best sort, saying nothing until he has seen the truth of it for himself. -- Richard Girling, Sunday Times

Important reading for policy makers, climate-change skeptics and
anyone planning a future beyond the next decade.
-- Kirkus, starred review

Pearce is no idle Jeremiah...his book signals a shift of tone in the popular debate. -- James Flint, Daily Telegraph

Pearce's scholarly and thoughtful book…will guide us in a sensible retreat to the place where we can negotiate a peace -- James Lovelock

This is a powerful book about the most important event in human history. Read it. -- Professor Lord May OM FRS, Oxford University

This is the most frightening book that I have ever read...everyone should read this book -- John Gribbin, The Independent

Very readable...Pearce is excellent at explaining the fantastically complex interrelationships of Earth systems. -- Steven Poole, The Guardian

a well-researched book that makes the science accessible and exiting, The Last Generation is an ideal choice -- Fiona Archer, ecozine.co.uk --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From the Back Cover

'Engaging, lucid and balanced...This is a powerful book about the most important event in human history. Read it.'
PROFESSOR LORD MAY, OXFORD UNIVERSITY

Since the last ice age, almost 13,000 years ago, human beings have prospered in a stable, predictable climate. But our generation is the last to be so blessed. In THE LAST GENERATION Fred Pearce lays bare the terrifying prognosis for our planet. Climate change from now on will not be gradual - nature doesn't do gradual change. In the past, Europe's climate has switched from Arctic to tropical in three to five years. It can happen again. So forget what environmentalists have told you about nature being a helpless victim of human excess. The truth is the opposite. She is a wild and resourceful beast given to fits of rage. And now that we are provoking her beyond endurance, she is starting to seek her revenge.

'Do we really need another book telling us that doom is imminent? In this case, the answer has to be yes.'
James Flint, DAILY TELEGRAPH


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
41 of 46 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Frightening but important 15 July 2006
Format:Paperback
If you were worried by James Lovelock's book Revenge of Gaia, you will be scared stiff by Fred Pearce's version of the same story. His message is essentially that human impacts on the climate and other ecological features of our planet are reaching a tipping point where it will be impossible to reverse the changes, whatever we do. The evidence is that ice caps don't take thousands of years to melt, for example, but could go in a rush so that sea level rises by 30 metres in ten years, before the end of this century. If you live in London or round the coast, think what that means. And it's just one of he threats we face. Pearce's writing style is very direct and personal, like reading a good quality newspaper, and he pulls no punches. Buy a copy and send it to your MP.
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32 of 37 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Does Earth need Alcoholics Anonymous? 12 Oct 2006
By Stephen A. Haines HALL OF FAME
Format:Paperback
Once, climate was seen like a sedate matron, ambling along at a measured pace. According to Fred Pearce, the climate is more like a drunk, lurching from one place to another in sporadic, unpredictable lunges. Rapid climate change was once considered a local phenomenon. Older, unprepared civilisations in one region staggered under shifts of weather, collapsing in the heat, but easily replaced by more efficient neighbours. Research has shown, argues Pearce, that the entire globe is interconnected through complex patterns. Even the starting points of climate changes are hidden in the mists of time. Until today. Now it's the byproducts of our society that are prompting the changes. How drastic these may be and where the changes will be most severe is the subject of this excellent, if very frightening account.

Fred Pearce has been in the climate investigation reporting business for nearly twenty years. He knows the players and he understands their work. His intimate knowledge of their views and the science behind those outlooks provide a sound foundation for his summation of how climate change is occurring. And it is occurring, he argues. It's happening so fast that he can confidently assert that this is "The Last Generation" that will enjoy anything like climate stability. That lurching drunk is more powerful and less predictable than previously imagined.

With his long experience to buttress his presentation, Pearce covers all the bases. Moving from polar ice through ocean currents to wind patterns, he provides a thorough examination of the issues and the people studying them. The eminent Wally Broecker, who proposed "the Great Ocean Conveyor" circulating polar water around the globe is carefully described. Pearce doesn't want to invoke Broecker's ire over a mis-statement. Lonnie Thompson, who has likely spent more time above 6000 metres altitude than any other lowlander alive, offers his critique of Broecker's model as the initiator of climate change. These men are the "elder statesmen" of climate investigation. The journalist has met them all, but he also introduces us to the "newcomers" in the field. Peter deMenocal is continuing the work of Gerard Bond on "solar pulses" of energy, while Mike Mann's "hockey stick" graph of temperature increase updated Charles Keeling's earlier records on carbon dioxide increase rates. In a few cases, the later worker has almost eclipsed his forbear as Milutin Milankovich is the name associated with relating climate with Earth's orbital shifts instead of that of James Croll, the crofter's son who worked that out in the late 19th Century.

New minds, asking new questions and probing with modern instruments, have produced fresh viewpoints on climate change. The most significant pattern among those views is that major climate change is in the offing. It will be likely very soon and very abrupt. Warming air and warming seas are providing lubricant for the ice caps in Greenland and the Antartic. Will these ice mountains soon slide into their neighbouring oceans? El Nino, the enigmatic countervailing wind in the Pacific Ocean is becoming more frequent in its occurrences. Are we headed for a permanent state of monsoon-inhibiting forces? Neither simple nor immediate answers are availble to answer those questions, as Pearce and his interviewees admit. That circumstance gives the "climate sceptics" a wedge to challenge the whole idea of climate change as a serious threat. The author draws on his resources to dismiss that objection, asserting that even the resistance to anthropogenic causes of today's climate disruptions no longer is tenable.

For Pearce, the issue isn't whether climate change is occurring - it is, and we are the cause - but rather how rapidly it will develop into a clearly visible threat. It's not important who's "leading the dance", the Poles or the Tropics, it's important that we recognise that threatening change is taking place now. Since the impact is already apparent, we must undertake efforts to reduce the effects and protect ourselves. We have already created "Another Planet" by the introduction of massive use of fossil fuels. Our children will be living on that orb, and we must help safeguard their future. He adopts a list of solutions originally proposed by Robert Socolow of Princeton University. These "wedges" - so called because they will start as minimal changes, but grow in strength and effectiveness with the passage of time - will reduce the load of carbon we're placing into the environment and let us return to a more stable climate condition. If the Earth needs an AA to survive, it is these wedges that will provide the therapy. The time to apply the therapy, however, is NOW. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A chilling book about global warming 29 Jan 2007
By Jazzrook TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
'The Last Generation' is a chilling read concerning the likely dire consequences of man-made global warming. Very clearly written, Fred Pearce's book puts forward detailed and convincing scientific evidence that human fossil fuel burning is producing dramatic changes in the world's climate. Unless governments take drastic action to reduce greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide in the next decade nature will take its revenge and "climatic monsters" will be unleashed.

As the experienced climate scientist, Wally Broecker, says, "climate is an angry beast and we are poking it with sticks".

As many people as possible should read this scary but thoughtful book, especially global warming sceptics such as George W. Bush and Jeremy Clarkson. It may even convert a few of them.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
3.0 out of 5 stars prophet of doom
Lots of "evidence" for adverse future of the seas and oceans. Very little by way of feasible/realisable solutions.
Get it from a library
Published 12 months ago by jpm
1.0 out of 5 stars An interesting read in Science Fiction, if that's you're thing.
Believe me, I'm generous in giving this book 1 star considering how presumptive and dismissive it is. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Postman
3.0 out of 5 stars Warning
Warning this has been reprinted under a different title, different front cover and different ISBN to Fred Pearce's With Speed and Violence. Read more
Published on 6 April 2011 by Buzzy
3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent anecdotes about climate scientists - but a missed...
Fred Pearce, a scientific journalist, hopes he is "in the best sense, a sceptical environmentalist", doubtless a dig at Lomborg, although he makes it clear early on that his... Read more
Published on 19 Jan 2008 by Nicholas J. R. Dougan
5.0 out of 5 stars essential reading
I've had an interest in global warming since I read Kit Pedler's "Quest for Gaia" in the late 70's. That in turn lead me to James Lovelock's books. Read more
Published on 30 July 2007 by Chulsk
5.0 out of 5 stars Compulsory reading for grounding yourself in the science of climate...
I've studied Environmental Science at degree level and I've got to say this is a very good overview the main climate science theories. Read more
Published on 14 April 2007 by Mr. G. E. Jones
5.0 out of 5 stars so now - you can't say you weren't warned.....
This is an engrossing, spine chilling, trenchant book.

All the more so given the thorough-going credibility of the author (his lack of axe to grind), his solid track... Read more
Published on 28 July 2006 by Mr. D. V. Belfield
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