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W**N
Reality for AGW denialists.
It's a good account of why there's a consensus of 97% of climate scientists that human activities are largely responsible for the current global warming, with 90% confidence. It's not perfect - there's no references or recommended extra reading (not necessarily a bad thing - Ian Plimer in 'Heaven and Earth' managed to cite 2000+ references many of which he got wrong or were irrelevant).It's a book I think I'll be rereading, at least in part. A lot of it is just common sense, such as the ways of reducing one's energy use, such as using power meters to detect electricity guzzlers (it's reassuring for me to know that my LED television, amplifier and DVD player on standby uses just 1.7 Watts of power, so there's little point switching them off at the wall).
J**S
The book is an updated version of his "Rough Guide ...
The book is an updated version of his "Rough Guide to Climate Change". I've thought so highly of this book that I've purchased over 200 copies over the years, giving them to students, TV meteorologists, politicians running for U.S. Congress, and the leadership of The Weather Channel. If I were teaching a course on climate change at the high school or introductory college level, this would be the text. Mr. Henson is probably the world's premier science writer in meteorology and climate change.Dr. Jeff Masters, wunderground.com
D**L
My favorite
Best climate change book I have ever read. It's fact-driven, analytical, functional, clear, and easy to read. It answers all my questions and I ask the weirdest questions about climatology and climate change. Would recommend for educators, debaters, "skeptics", and scientists alike.
M**J
Not as good as other books on climate change
Not as good as other books on climate change. Lots of rehashing of standard published material. Also, very mainstream, which is to say, somewhat dismissive of the risk of runaway changes in temperature and/or sea-level. Not particularly good at addressing change issues beyond 2050 and 2100 (when sea level rise will just be getting going unless we do see a sea shelf collapse). Little discussion of the outcomes if fossil fuel consumption continues to increase at rates similar to today.In short, a summary of the middle of the road outcomes and the science behind it, with little attention to the the real expectations (where expectation = risk * damage). No discussion of the rate of change of consensus forecasts (always worsening) and asking what this may mean about current forecasts, and how they are very likely to change.If you know little or nothing about the science and history of climate change forecasting, this book will provide a pretty good overview to a determined reader.
D**G
Still the best of its genre, but has room for small yet significant improvements
This is a recommendable book, but not as much so as it might have been. It is indeed “derived” quite closely “from material originally published as the ‘Rough Guide to Climate Change’, ” by the same author, and, as with its predecessors, includes some important updates befitting a still fast-evolving subject.This work remains valuable as a concise yet encyclopedic, readable yet scientifically accurate “one-stop-shopping” reference guide. It was for that reason that I purchased the second edition of the ‘Rough Guide,’ used it for a class I taught, recommended it to the students, and later replaced it with the equally praiseworthy third edition.Though it has the same section titles, and much the same solidly informative content as the 'Rough Guide,' this newer ‘Thinking Person’s Guide,’ has added length without adding comparably to quality, and unfortunately does not fully replace the earlier publication (e.g., the third edition). The most serious step backwards is the complete axing in the new book of a very well-done ten page section of “Resources: Climate change books and websites” in its predecessors. Given the book’s raison d’etre as a reference tool, to entirely omit the sources for additional reading component amounts to a notable editing error. Any inference (e.g. from page xvii) that the AMS bookstore website (with a small number of its own publications on climate topics, T shirts, etc.) is some sort of effective online replacement for a proper comprehensive bibliography and source guide would be absurd. The “digital versions of key graphics” (available on the webpage for the book itself, though this is not clear from the page xvii directions) will no doubt be useful for lecturers but do not show more than what is in the printed book itself (albeit well done there).The “Who’s Responsible” section of the book contains more material than the ‘Rough Guide’ did, but a chance was missed to add in the most important international comparison. Carbon dioxide emissions are long-lived and accumulate in the atmosphere: to keep their “greenhouse effect” from increasing would require not just leveling off emissions but eliminating them more or less altogether, on a net basis. (A roughly level ‘stock’ of atmospheric CO2 requires a roughly zero net ‘flow,’ at least for centuries to come). A key stumbling block to international carbon emissions agreements has been the consistent reluctance of large but late industrializers such as China and India to commit to major cuts, on the basis that their countries’ cumulative historical emissions are still well below the magnitude of predecessors such as the US and UK. This expanded ‘Thinking Person’s Guide,’ however, includes no country-by-country comparison of cumulative CO2 releases.Another missed opportunity occurs in the similarly worded but now longer by about a fifth “Heated Debate” section where the at least potentially misleading use of the word “skeptic” is undiminished if not increased. Some public criticism of climate change science is “skeptical” however most of it in recent years has been anything but, and the amount of genuine uncertainty voiced (concerning the basic scientific findings) has by any objective assessment been in notable long term decline since at least the late 1990s. Of course, the motives for and forms exhibited by efforts to spread disinformation about climate science vary, but if a single catch-all designation is required, one could easily think of a number which would be more accurate than “skepticism.” The new book missed a chance to devote about one of its about fifty additional pages to the still apt and still underquoted observation of science historian Spencer Weart in 2006: “Half a century ago, nearly all scientists thought greenhouse warming was scarcely likely to be a problem. It took decades of accumulating evidence, with many hard-fought debates, to convince them they were wrong. Panels of scientists convened on climate change hundreds of times in many countries. As scientists, most of the panelists were professional skeptics.”Author Robert Henson and the AMS are to be commended for dispassionately tackling some of the more controversial and politically thorny aspects of climate change policy debates, but going along (even accidentally) with the semantic trick of mislabeling disinformation about science as skepticism is unnecessary. A related (and ripe for revision but not revised) text example occurs in the author’s introduction: “Whether you’re alarmed, skeptical, or simply curious…this book will help.” The book will indeed help, and a plug for it on that basis is both justified and informative, but buying into the deliberately misframed dichotomy of “alarmists” versus “skeptics” is an unfortunate illustration of what the book itself on pages 336-37 rightly criticizes as the “misleading sense of symmetry” resulting from a misapplied “media paradigm” of “two sides to EVERY story” [or, in this example, three sides]. Portraying almost as a sort of random personal preference a dichotomy between searching for scientific truth and deliberately obfuscating it does not seem particularly respectful to the “thinking person” towards whom the book is aimed.A more subtle misconstruction, though still easily remediable and well within the ability of open-minded “thinkers” to understand a clarifying revision of, occurs at the outset of the AMS policy director’s foreword: “The choices we make over the next several years will help set the direction for civilization and (Earth’s climate) for decades and centuries to come.” While this hyperbole cannot be definitively ruled out, it certainly cannot be proven either, and it is a defacto gift to peddlers of anti-science myths. One of the most potent arguments against the past several decades of advancement in climate science has been the impression (exaggerated and misleading but not entirely unfounded either) of repeated warnings of impending doom repeatedly not coming to pass.Time is indeed of the essence in anthropogenic global climate disruption, for two powerful reasons: 1) Each year’s delay in acting to significantly cut humanity’s reliance on fossil fuels makes it increasingly difficult for us to end up staying below the total “safe for climate as humans have known it” amount of such fuel which can be cumulatively consumed. 2) We will probably not know for sure when they hit us until after they have, but at some stage positive feedback “tipping points” are likely. We may be reaching some major ones already now or maybe not for many decades to come, but whenever they do come, they are very probably going to be quite bad news, especially in retrospect.It is thus crucial to get this timing issue right. We cannot say how much more time we will have to work with and on what basis, but continued delay is reckless. NOT, however (and repeated periodically like a marketing slogan), that the next little while is necessarily known to be THE decisive time frame. The Foreword, inadvertently no doubt, but nonetheless most unfortunately, misconstrues this timing issue, and on the opening page of the text. “We must act right now or else” overhyping has been an endemic rut helping stall climate policy development for decades. Ironically, the overall high caliber of this book makes it a more glaring error here than elsewhere.These drawbacks are nevertheless readily repairable, and it is to be hoped that future editions will take the “thinking person” mission more to heart and seek to go a few small but vital steps beyond the readable how-to-manual-for-anyone objective, as worthy as that more limited goal surely is. Meanwhile, this book, like its preceding editions, can still be widely recommended for its deft and generally thorough depiction of trees. For a really clear view of the broader forest as well, readers will need to go elsewhere, and the first place I would suggest starting with would be the list of sources included in its immediate predecessor but inexplicably dropped from this volume.
A**N
Clearly written and up to date. This isn't a ...
Clearly written and up to date. This isn't a guide you'll read cover to cover, but if there's anything related to climate change that you want to know more about, it seems to be in here. I plan to use this as a supplementary resource in a course for college juniors.
T**N
Excellent intro to climate change
This book is well written, balanced, and comprehensive. It covers the subject from pretty much every angle -- the science, the politics, what you can do on a personal level. As someone new to climate activism, it was exactly the kind of book I was looking for.
C**Y
THE one volume book on climate change
The is the best book for lay people on climate change. Comphrensive, balanced, up-to-date and authoritative. An earlier version was called essential for reporters by Yale. Google Rough Guide to Climate Change (3ed) by Henson
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