Ratings36
Average rating3.6
The World Without Us, an intriguing peek inside the impact homo sapiens have on the world around us and what will be left when we cease to exist. Alan Weisman intelligently intertwines the affect we have on the Earth and its ecosystems and the way we have damaged it, the things nature can't undo. A tremendous report on the ways we have killed the flora and fauna and how we will ultimately exterminate ourselves, bringing all that is left of human civilization with us. ~ Written by an 11 year old
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This book was not what I thought it was going to be, and I was mightily disappointed.
What did I think it would be? Well, I thought it would look at what would become of the planet Earth if tomorrow the human species simply vanished; basically, what it says on the tin. What the book spends an extraordinary amount of time actually discussing is what existed before humans evolved and what horrible things we have done since then. I fail to see what the Mau Mau Uprising or what killed off the woolly mammoths have to do with this book, and yet there they are, gobbling up space and too much of my time.
I made it a handful of pages past 100, and in that space there were about two chapters in the book that actually talked about what would happen to human-made and natural spaces once humans were gone. That's it, just two! They were fantastic chapters, very informative and easy to read, but the off-topic junk is taking up too much space and I find myself actually angry at the prospect of reading this book.
I got this book on CD from the library because I had watched the History Channel special based on this book and enjoyed it. I expected the book to be similar to the TV program–a look into what the world would be like if humans suddenly disappeared. The book does cover this, but mostly it discusses how humans are currently ruining the planet and that the world would be better off without us. That may be true, but it's depressing to listen to for 12+ hours!
My favorite chapter was the first one, where the narration sweeps in a gods-eye view across a world where human-made artifacts slowly crumble, buildings collapse, pipes leak, asphalt breaks, and where nature reclaims its rightful space. There is something so haunting and breath-taking in this vision of us and our artifacts and our toxic and invasive remnants slowly being erased from the planet. Gladly would have stayed in this detached meditative vision.
But then Weisman gets more practical, we learn from experts how our chemicals, our gardens, our tunnels and radio waves will fare in this thought experiment of a world, where all humanity will suddenly go poof.
Jak by svět byl krásný bez lidí... Ano, pokrokem ničíme planetu čím dál více, i když v současné době si to i více uvědomujeme a snažíme se proti tomu bojovat. Nicméně už jsme způsobili některé věci, které navždy budu mít vliv na přírodu (plast, který se nikdy nerozloží). Svět bez lidí chvíli bude vypadat jako velmi ponuré místo, jako z katastrofických filmů. Na Zemi je přes 400 jaderných elektráren, které bez obsluhy lidí způsobí horší katastrofu než byl Černobyl a z těchto míst se stanou zóny smrti, kde nic neporoste a nebude žít. Co mě však překvapilo nejvíc, bylo to, že města taková zaniknou rychleji, než jsem si myslel. New York může skončit pod vodou (město musí každý den odčerpávat 13 milionů galonů vody z tunelů metra, kam zatýká neustále voda). S lidmi vyhynou i domestikovaná zvířata, která jsou na lidech závislá a stanou se obětí predátorů.
My lidé jsme zašli příliš daleko a je jen na nás, zda tuto chybu napravíme, jinak se nám to může pěkně vymstít.
Featured Prompt
38 booksApril is Earth Month! 🌎 What fiction or nonfiction books would you recommend to readers who want to learn more about environmental issues, climate crisis, and protecting our planet?