Book Review: ‘Hope Dies Last’ visits visionaries fighting global warming
- Alan Weisman spent years researching his book, finding people saving the planet across a dozen countries.
- He sought these individuals because Earth faces catastrophe from fossil fuels trapping heat.
- These individuals repair damaged ecosystems and develop processes using less energy, such as restoring wetlands.
- Weisman's research resulted in a 74-page bibliography and the quote, "As long as we let them keep on, there is hope."
- Their efforts provide hope and can prevent a catastrophic future for our planet.
33 Articles
33 Articles

Book Review: ‘Hope Dies Last’ visits visionaries fighting global warming
By JEFF ROWE Alan Weisman has found an all-world cast of scientists, engineers and environmentalists who have dreamed big and worked passionately to repair some of the world’s wrecked ecosystems and also to develop processes that, for example, use far less energy than we get from oil Related Articles Literary picks for week of April 20: Poetry slam and Independent Bookstore Day Literary calendar for week of April 2…

Book Review: 'Hope Dies Last' visits visionaries fighting global warming
“Hope Dies Last” publishes on Earth Day this week and author Alan Weisman deserves applause for finding some truly inspirational people around the world pursuing projects combating pollution and other human-caused disruptions overheating our planet. But as Associated Press reviewer…
Morgan Hill author’s eco-thriller explores climate activism, motherhood, morality | Gilroy Dispatch | Gilroy, California
In her new novel “Fallout,” local author Jordan Rosenfeld weaves a narrative of environmental activism, maternal grief and moral complexity through the interconnected stories of two women navigating a world threatened by corporate pollution and climate change. The “eco-thriller,” which Rosenfeld has spent nearly a decade crafting, follows journalist Justine Goodman as she becomes entangled with Project Nemesis, an all-women “eco-anarchist” group…
Book Review: 'Hope Dies Last' visits visionaries fighting global warming - The Morning Sun
Alan Weisman has found an all-world cast of scientists, engineers and environmentalists who have dreamed big and worked passionately to repair some of the world’s wrecked ecosystems and also to develop processes that, for example, use far less energy than we get from oil Take Azzam Alwash, for example. An engineer, he lamented destruction of thousands of square miles of marshes in Iraq that date to Biblical times and were his birthplace. Birds, …
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