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The World
Without us
by
Alan Weisman
A
penetrating,
page-turning
tour of a
post-human
Earth
In The
World
Without Us,
Alan
Weisman
offers an
utterly
original
approach to
questions of
humanity’s
impact on
the
planet: he
asks us to
envision our
Earth,
without us.
In this
far-reaching
narrative,
Weisman
explains
how our
massive
infrastructure
would
collapse
and
finally
vanish
without
human
presence;
which
everyday
items
may
become
immortalized
as
fossils;
how
copper
pipes
and
wiring
would be
crushed
into
mere
seams of
reddish
rock;
why some
of our
earliest
buildings
might be
the last
architecture
left;
and how
plastic,
bronze
sculpture,
radio
waves,
and some
man-made
molecules
may be
our most
lasting
gifts to
the
universe.
The
World
Without
Us
reveals
how,
just
days
after
humans
disappear,
floods
in New
York’s
subways
would
start
eroding
the
city’s
foundations,
and how,
as the
world’s
cities
crumble,
asphalt
jungles
would
give way
to real
ones. It
describes
the
distinct
ways
that
organic
and
chemically
treated
farms
would
revert
to wild,
how
billions
more
birds
would
flourish,
and how
cockroaches
in
unheated
cities
would
perish
without
us.
Drawing
on the
expertise
of
engineers,
atmospheric
scientists,
art
conservators,
zoologists,
oil
refiners,
marine
biologists,
astrophysicists,
religious
leaders
from
rabbis
to the
Dali
Lama,
and
paleontologists---who
describe
a
prehuman
world
inhabited
by
megafauna
like
giant
sloths
that
stood
taller
than
mammoths---Weisman
illustrates
what the
planet
might be
like
today,
if not
for us.
From
places
already
devoid
of
humans
(a last
fragment
of
primeval
European
forest;
the
Korean
DMZ;
Chernobyl),
Weisman
reveals
Earth’s
tremendous
capacity
for
self-healing.
As he
shows
which
human
devastations
are
indelible,
and
which
examples
of our
highest
art and
culture
would
endure
longest,
Weisman’s
narrative
ultimately
drives
toward a
radical
but
persuasive
solution
that
needn't
depend
on our
demise.
It is
narrative
nonfiction
at its
finest,
and in
posing
an
irresistible
concept
with
both
gravity
and a
highly
readable
touch,
it looks
deeply
at our
effects
on the
planet
in a way
that no
other
book
has.
Reviews:
If a virulent virus—or even the Rapture—depopulated Earth overnight, how
long before all trace of humankind
vanished? That's the provocative, and
occasionally puckish, question posed by
Weisman (An Echo in My Blood) in
this imaginative hybrid of solid science
reporting and morbid speculation. Days
after our disappearance, pumps keeping
Manhattan's subways dry would fail,
tunnels would flood, soil under streets
would sluice away and the foundations of
towering skyscrapers built to last for
centuries would start to crumble. At the
other end of the chronological spectrum,
anything made of bronze might survive in
recognizable form for millions of
years—along with one billion pounds of
degraded but almost indestructible
plastics manufactured since the mid-20th
century. Meanwhile, land freed from
mankind's environmentally poisonous
footprint would quickly reconstitute
itself, as in Chernobyl, where animal
life has returned after 1986's deadly
radiation leak, and in the demilitarized
zone between North and South Korea, a
refuge since 1953 for the almost-extinct
goral mountain goat and Amur leopard.
From a patch of primeval forest in
Poland to monumental underground
villages in Turkey, Weisman's
enthralling tour of the world of
tomorrow explores what little will
remain of ancient times while
anticipating, often poetically, what a
planet without us would be like.
Publishers Weekly
"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 and
Deep Economy: The Wealth
of Communities and The
Durable Future
“The imaginative power
of The World Without
Us is compulsive and
nearly hypnotic--make
sure you have time to be
kidnapped into Alan
Weisman’s alternative
world before you sit
down with the book,
because you won’t soon
return. This is a text
that has a chance to
change people, and so
make a real difference
for the planet.”
- Charles Wohlforth,
author of L.A. Times
Book Prize-winning
The Whale and the
Supercomputer
“Alan Weisman offers us
a sketch of where we
stand as a species that
is both illuminating and
terrifying. His tone is
conversational and his
affection for both Earth
and humanity
transparent.”
- Barry Lopez, author
of Arctic Dreams
“Fascinating, mordant,
deeply intelligent, and
beautifully written,
The World Without Us
depicts the spectacle of
humanity’s impact on the
planet Earth in
tragically poignant
terms that go far beyond
the dry dictates of
science. This is a very
important book for a
species playing games
with its own destiny.”
- James Howard Kunstler,
author of The Long
Emergency
About the Author:
Alan Weisman
is an award-winning journalist whose
reports have appeared in Harper’s,
The New York Times Magazine, The
Atlantic Monthly, Discover,
and on NPR, among others. A former
contributing editor to The Los Angeles
Times Magazine, he is a senior radio
producer for Homelands Productions and
teaches international journalism at the
University of Arizona. His essay “Earth
Without People” (Discover
magazine, February 2005), on which
The World Without Us expands, was
selected for Best American Science
Writing 2006.
Visit Alan Website and Watch the Book
Trailer!
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