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The World Without Us [Hardcover]

Alan Weisman
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Virgin Books; First Edition edition (5 July 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1905264038
  • ISBN-13: 978-1905264032
  • Product Dimensions: 15.5 x 3.1 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 190,678 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Alan Weisman
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Product Description

Review

"'This is one of the grandest thought experiments of our time, a tremendous feat of imaginative reporting!', Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature"

Daily Mail

'The results of this huge thought-experiment are both fascinating
and surprising'

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
42 of 47 people found the following review helpful
Withdrawal symptoms 27 Nov 2007
By Stephen A. Haines HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
According to some biologists, the Earth is suffering an "infestation". The afflicting organism, "Homo sapiens" has overrun the planet. The infection is recent, several thousand years old in its most virulent phase. During that brief period, however, the surface of the planet has been seriously transformed. Alan Weisman has confronted the impact of our infection of the biosphere with an entirely fresh approach. Relying little on speculation, excepting only what might make the human species disappear, he points up our environmental foot print describing how the planet would recover from what our presence has effected. A captivating read, this book is at once an indictment and a challenge to our intellect and our values.

The great metropolis of New York City is one focal point in this account. Once traversed by 40 meandering streams feeding the ocean and river, the island, but for its striking Central Park, is now "tamed". Massive buildings line its many kilometres of pavement, and the storm sewer systems have replaced Nature's waterways. Yet, those rivulets persist, demanding flow rights. The loss of humanity would shut down the 753 pumps that keep the subway tunnels relatively dry. The streams, assisted by the bordering river and ocean would quickly inundate them. The bridges' streams of vehicles haven't stopped the return of wildlife to the city, and human abandonment would accelerate the process. Botany's realm, however, may never recover its original domain. Too many human-introduced species have an irresistible foothold. Those tall buildings bracketing the asphalt ribbons would also ultimately break down, providing havens for birds and small mammals before succumbing. The one species we've all been taught to be the ultimate survivor - the kitchen cockroach - would disappear with the first harsh winter.

Weisman doesn't limit his account for his native land's reading audience, however. The entire planet becomes his information hunting ground. An ancient patch of forest in Eastern Europe has been protected for centuries by hunting noblemen. While the deletion of humans would allow the forest to expand, it's likely the confined herd of European bison would enjoy the same recovery. In our original homeland, the natural predator-prey balance would be briefly offset by the ready meals our domesticated animals would provide. Herds of cattle, goats and sheep in Africa, untutored by natural selection to avoid lions and cheetahs, would fill feline bellies. Where the big cats would rule undeterred for a time, many microbes would be forced to make some spectacular adjustments. Oil dumps and nuclear stations, slowly breaking down would flood the landscape with hydrocarbons and radiation. Some microbes are already resistant to radioactive elements while some can "eat" oil. Others would have to expand their range of comestibles by adapting to them over millennia. Whether similar adjustments might be made for the mass of plastics we've dumped into the world remains an open question, Weisman says.

Although his original premise may be fantasy, the crux of his discussion is based on solid science. His interviews are with people who are in a position to gauge how we affect the world. Some of them are in place to prevent the recursion of nature into the habitat we've created for our species' benefit. One, archaeologist Arthur Demarest, is investigating a small segment of "the world without us", the site of the Maya realm. The 1600-year-long reign of those Central American people must have seemed "destined to thrive forever". The "spectacular, sudden collapse" took only a century. The return of the rainforest hides their existence from European invaders' eyes for another millennium.

Although Weisman's view of a dehumanised planet is compelling, almost desirable, he knows neither he nor his readership would be pleased by our extinction. We want to go on existing. Yet, he notes, "every four days, the world population rises by four million" - a clearly unsustainable rate of growth. Weisman has a scenario for survival, but its application would have to be nearly as instantaneous as his scenario of disappearance. His aim is curtailment of the human infestation - by the "draconian measure" of universal birth control. He argues that every human female must be limited to producing but one offspring. A challenging scenario, obviously, but one which he argues would reduce the planet's infesting species to a total of 1.6 billion by the end of this century. The number's validity may be disputed, but the goal is admirable. Could such a scenario possibly be envisioned, let alone implemented? It's that, he says, or a new wave of human colonisation - on other planets. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By SCM TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
The basic premise that underlies this book is actually rather interesting - what would happen to the world if humans were no longer here - not destroyed in some catastrophic fashion that would also impact on the rest of the world, but just died rapidly. It explores a range of aspects of human life and plots what would happen to them over time. While being very readable I am not sure that the whole book matches the quality of the initial idea. I ended up feeling that it was a missed opportunity.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By J. Cronin VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
What would happen if humanity were to depart in one go from the Earth? How would the world manage without us? What would happen to the environment, our cities or fauna and flora?

One of the early sections in this book visits New York city and the team of men who are responsible for the never-ending pumping out of water from under the city, which constantly threatens to fill subways. The author then goes through the surprisingly rapid decline of the city. If you've ever stood in Manhattan gazing along the straight avenues and streets, and were amazed at the scale of construction, then this section will chill you right through. Later in the book, the author desctribes an abandoned seaside town in Cyrpus and it's decline in decrepitude.

A common thread thoughout the book concerns our effect on the environment and how long it would take for the Earth to correct itself if we were to depart. What about the ozone-damaging chemicals we pump out into the atmosphere, or the heavy metals and radioactive materials we dump and store without regard for future generations. The U.S. has silos of chock-full radioactive materials, surrounded by hundreds of warning signs. Due to the fact that human languages can mutate beyond recognition over just a few hundred years, the warning signs had to be desinged to be comprehensible to anyone who came across them. The author visits oil-refining facilities in Texas to examine what would happen there should humans suddenly stop running these facilities. A trip to Chernobyl is used to illustrate what could happen in the aftermath of a nuclear containment failure.

By examining the rise of humanity from the depths of Africa, the author looks for the most suitable candidate to suceed us once we depart. The sudden departure of megafauna from the Earth is examined and is attributed to the increasing ability of Homo Sapiens to hunt. From a research facility in England, we learn how farmland will handle the fertilisers and chemicals we have left behind, and how eventually, trees will once again cover the land.

The author has gathered together so many areas of science in this book. However, due to skillful mixing of the strands, we never suffer from fatigue. He admits that the sudden departure of humans from the planet is fantasy, but the science and research he has gathered is rock-solid, and often chilling. Weisman portrays the sheer disregard humanity has for its home and its other inhabitants, yet his book also reveals the immense capacity of the Earth to heal itself. This book lingers in the mind long after you have finished reading it.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Not what I expected, not like the History channel series
The subject of this, and also the tv series, is what the world would be like if there were no humans - no catastrophe or epidemic, just gone. Read more
Published 26 days ago by Louise Roberts
An inconvenient truth
Environmentalist Alan Weisman has come up with a new way of making us think about the world. What would it be like without humans? Read more
Published 11 months ago by colette
A great subject but the tellling was not always for me
Alan Weisman covers many fascinating topics in his book, a thought experiment: what would happen to the world if humans suddenly disappeared? Read more
Published 11 months ago by paperbackliker
Sob, heavy world...
What would happen to the planet and the animals that inhabit it if every human were to disappear overnight? Read more
Published 19 months ago by C. A. Gallagher
What would the world be like if man disappeared?
An excellent "what if?" book with valuable lessons for those concerned about the environment.
Published 20 months ago by Blaran Odhar
Flowing and thought-provoking
There already seems plenty of description reviews, so i'll just add my personal opinions on the book:
The book is truly addictive. Read more
Published on 24 Jan 2010 by Alison L. Ball
A thought-provoking book
'The World Without Us' is a cross between a travelogue and a science book. At times it's a bit like reading a geography magazine with a theme of conservation. Read more
Published on 18 Dec 2009 by LXIX
World Without Us - for better or worse?
In recent years there have been a number of books and TV programmes (not to mention the movie 'I Am Legend' with Will Smith) about an Earth from which humans have been somehow... Read more
Published on 8 Oct 2009 by D. A. Hardy
World Without Us - for better or worse?
In recent years there have been a number of books and TV programmes (not to mention the movie 'I Am Legend' with Will Smith) about an Earth from which humans have been removed. Read more
Published on 8 Oct 2009 by D. A. Hardy
Watch the T.V documentary instead
My partner saw this book advertised in a magazine, and went on about ordering it so I decided to read up some reviews. Many said you get to page 50, get bored and stop reading. Read more
Published on 14 Aug 2009 by Emma L. Knott
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