Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

The Rough Guide to Climate Change: A book review
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 13:47 GMT le 29 janvier 2008 +1
If you're bewildered by the complexity of the climate change/global warming issue, and want a comprehensive, easy-to-understand guide that presents an unbiased view of the important issues, look no further than Robert Henson's Rough Guide to Climate Change. In fact, we've found the Rough Guide to Climate Change so helpful and well written, that wunderground has licensed a copy of the introductory chapter and featured it on our Climate Change web page. This chapter is a "sneak preview" of the Second Edition, which is scheduled to be released February 4. If I were teaching a course on climate change at the high school or introductory college level, this would be the text.

However, the Rough Guide does not read like a textbook. It presents the key issues in a straightforward, clear, and conversational manner. The author, Robert Henson, is a meteorologist and journalist who works as a writer/editor at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. He organizes his book into four sections: "The basics"--global warming in a nutshell; "The symptoms"--what's happening now, and what might happen in the future; "The science"--how we know what we know about climate change; and "Debates & solutions"--from spats and spin to saving the planet. The book has information current up to September 2007, and discusses the major climate change event so far this century--the record melting of the Arctic's sea ice that peaked in September 2007, opening the Northwest Passage for the first time in recorded history.

Helpful graphics and interesting sidebars are interspersed throughout the text. Some of the more interesting sidebars include an interview with James Lovelock, originator of the Gaia Hypothesis that treats Earth as a living being; "The Nights Chicago Fried", an account of the deadly 1999 heat wave in Chicago; and "The Fast-Disappearing Snows of Kilimanjaro", discussing the controversy over why Mt. Kilimanjaro's ice is disappearing. My favorite sidebar is "Climate Change and the Cinema", where we learn that the first movie to discuss artificial climate change was probably Zombies of the Stratosphere (1952), which featured a young Leonard Nimoy as part of a gang of Martians bent on exploding Earth from its orbit so Mars can move sunward and benefit from a warmer climate. The sidebar also discusses the impact of movies like The Day After Tomorrow and Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth.

The 2006 first edition of the Rough Guide is my favorite climate change reference book, and I highly recommend purchasing the second edition when it comes out February 4. You can preorder a copy of the second edition from amazon.com ($16.99, softcover). Overall rating: four stars out of four.

Jeff Masters
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151. Starwoman 06:01 GMT le 01 février 2008    
Thanks LittleMul und SormJunky!

Great links!

SJ: you've got so many links on your site - I often don't know where to start. But in the meantime I've got a nice list in my bookmarks, thanks to you all.

Have a nice day :-)
Member Since: 11 septembre 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 192
152. SteveBloom 21:36 GMT le 03 février 2008    
Re #147: Spamming that all over the place, eh jer? If you followed the links in that piece and looked at the descriptions of the conditions during the prior passages, the truth would become obvious. Was it only a good article in your view because it tells you what you want to hear?

Let's have a look at the very first claim in the article:

The BBC is quoted as saying last September that "the most direct shipping route from Europe to Asia is fully clear of ice for the first time since records began." This is claimed to conflict with a 2000 article's statement that "a Canadian police patrol boat has completed a voyage through the fabled Northwest Passage without encountering any pack ice."

Does a lack of pack ice mean a lack of any ice, and is it even the same route under discussion? On the latter point, have a look at the route maps here and compare them with this satellite map of the 2007 minimum. See the new and much more navigable route?
153. Donna 04:32 GMT le 06 mai 2008    
I just started reading this book, got it from the library, and *love* it. Thank you very much for reviewing it and bringing it to my attention.

Learning a lot, even though I thought i knew a bunch already! ;)

best
Donna Jones
Member Since: 7 janvier 2002 Posts: 0 Comments: 2

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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