Has anyone read _Terra Nova: The New World After Oil, Cars, and Suburbs_,
a 2013 book about sustainability?
This week's New Scientist magazine has a 3-page discussion of whether sustainability necessarily means a reduction in the quality of life for people in the developed world. The article references several people and books that argue that a move to sustainable practices could actually mean an improvement in health and happiness rather than a sacrifice of the "good life."
This book looks interesting, and both the professional reviews and the Amazon reader reviews are quite positive (though there are only 4 Amazon reader reviews thus far).
Unfortunately, as has become quite common, the Kindle price ($11.99) is a bit high for an e-book (since you don't actually own an e-book or have the freedom to pass it around to friends whom you might wish to expose to the influence of such material), so I am not ready to buy it just yet. In fact, I might check the university library to see if it is available there.
On the other hand, if anyone here has read it and thinks it is important enough, then maybe it would be worthwhile to buy it--not just for my own reading, but so I can both support the author and encourage my friends to read it.
[font color = "red"]*[/font]Here is the Amazon page for the book:
http://www.amazon.com/Terra-Nova-World-After-Suburbs/dp/1419704346
[font color = "red"]*[/font]Here are the summary of the book on the Amazon page and the professional reviews cited there:
Many experts agree that energy is the defining issue of this century. Economic recessions, foreign wars, and foreclosures are only a few of the results of Americas dependence on oil. In Terra Nova, ecologist Eric Sanderson elucidates the interconnections between oil and money, cars and transportation, and suburbs and land use. He then charts a path toward renewed economic growth, enhanced national security, revitalized communities, and a sustainable environment: a new form of the American Dream.
Taking a uniquely cross-disciplinary, accessible approach, Sanderson delves into natural history, architecture, chemistry, and politics, to show how the American relationship to nature shaped our past and predicates our future. Illustrated throughout with maps, charts, and infographics, the book suggests how we achieve a better world through a self-reinforcing cycle of tax reform, retrofitted towns and cities, bicycles and streetcars, and investment in renewable energy.
Praise for Terra Nova:
If youre going to read one book on the end of oil and the future of energy, make it this one. Eric Sanderson has thought deeply about the impact of our petroleum-dependent economy, how we got here, and where were headed. You may not agree with everything you read here, but this book should be the launching point for a desperately needed discussion about our modern way of life. Daniel H. Pink, New York Times bestselling author of Drive and To Sell Is Human
The highly readable text is complemented by illustrations, including maps, statistical tables, and extensive notes. VERDICT: The information supplied here would be difficult to find elsewhere. This book is recommended for all readers interested in the future of the United States and for both public and academic library collections.
Library Journal
Likening oil, cars, and suburbs to modern-day Sirens, those beautiful winged monsters that tempted Odysseus with their songs, conservation ecologist Sanderson (Mannahatta) discourages an over-reliance on these things in this well-intentioned cautionary volume. The comparison is an ambitious one he employs throughout, believing they could doom Americans the way the Sirens would have doomed Odysseus, had he succumbed to their choruses . . . . Sanderson commendably outlines a new way of life . . . designed to sustain American prosperity, health, and freedom for generations to come, but whether his suggestions or admonitions will be taken seriously is another matter entirely.
Publishers Weekly
lapfog_1
(29,199 posts)covered (in scifi format) the sustainability of a world without suburbs and cars
tblue37
(65,281 posts)Thanks for the recommendation--I will look for that book.
Have you heard anything about Terra Nova, though? It is nonfiction. It does look interesting--but I spend a fortune on books (and ebooks), and I have been trying to be a bit more selective lately, since, as I said in my OP, you don't actually "own" an ebook, and you can't pass it around to your friends. Since those two limitations pertain to ebooks, I resent paying more than $10 for one.
arcane1
(38,613 posts)bananas
(27,509 posts)A couple of entries about Indian Point nuclear generation facility:
http://www.terranovasupplemental.com/2013/05/how-many-windmills-to-replace-indian.html
http://www.terranovasupplemental.com/2013/05/maybe-not-so-crazy.html
Based on those, it's probably a good book.
sorechasm
(631 posts)From what I've read so far, it's quite good. I've had a brief diet of reading 'oil economy' literature. This one is better than most....not quite so dire. Only half about our gullible history with the stuff, half about our potential future without it. It also updates some of my favorite writers on urbanism such as Lewis Mumford and Jane Adams.