The Heat Will Kill You First
Life and Death on a Scorched Planet
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Narrated by:
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L. J. Ganser
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By:
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Jeff Goodell
About this listen
New York Times best-selling journalist Jeff Goodell presents a "masterful, bracing" (David Wallace-Wells) examination of the impact that temperature rise will have on our lives and on our planet, offering a vital new perspective on where we are headed, how we can prepare, and what is at stake if we fail to act.
“When heat comes, it’s invisible. It doesn’t bend tree branches or blow hair across your face to let you know it’s arrived…. The sun feels like the barrel of a gun pointed at you.”
The world is waking up to a new reality: wildfires are now seasonal in California, the Northeast is getting less and less snow each winter, and the ice sheets in the Arctic and Antarctica are melting fast. Heat is the first order threat that drives all other impacts of the climate crisis. And as the temperature rises, it is revealing fault lines in our governments, our politics, our economy, and our values. The basic science is not complicated: Stop burning fossil fuels tomorrow, and the global temperature will stop rising tomorrow. Stop burning fossil fuels in 50 years, and the temperature will keep rising for 50 years, making parts of our planet virtually uninhabitable. It’s up to us. The hotter it gets, the deeper and wider our fault lines will open.
The Heat Will Kill You First is about the extreme ways in which our planet is already changing. It is about why spring is coming a few weeks earlier and fall is coming a few weeks later and the impact that will have on everything from our food supply to disease outbreaks. It is about what will happen to our lives and our communities when typical summer days in Chicago or Boston go from 90° F to 110°F. A heatwave, Goodell explains, is a predatory event— one that culls out the most vulnerable people. But that is changing. As heatwaves become more intense and more common, they will become more democratic.
As an award-winning journalist who has been at the forefront of environmental journalism for decades, Goodell’s new book may be his most provocative yet, explaining how extreme heat will dramatically change the world as we know it. Masterfully reported, mixing the latest scientific insight with on-the-ground storytelling, Jeff Goodell tackles the big questions and uncovers how extreme heat is a force beyond anything we have reckoned with before.
Critic reviews
"The climate crisis brings no greater threat than the prospect of deadly extreme heat. In The Heat Will Kill You First, Jeff Goodell brings a mix of fantastic storytelling, lucid science communication, and eternal optimism in detailing the profound threat we face with the climate crisis and what we can still do about it.”—Michael Mann, Presidential Distinguished Professor, University of Pennsylvania and author of The New Climate War
“It is already a new world, hotter than ever before in human history and getting rapidly hotter still. The Heat Will Kill You First is a masterful, bracing, vivid portrait of the future we now know will be shaped, like clay, by that heat—a godlike force, as Goodell writes, governing all life conducted under its profound and brutal reign.”—David Wallace-Wells, author of The New York Times bestselling The Uninhabitable Earth
“This is a scary book. It humanizes global warming by telling amazing stories of individuals already affected by it, making very clear the danger we are putting ourselves in. We all have a cognitive map in our head that includes a near future, which is sketchier than our map of the present, being made of our hopes and fears. This book will sharpen that sketch in electrifying ways. You won’t see the world the same way after reading it.”—Kim Stanley Robinson, New York Times bestselling author of The High Sierra and The Ministry for the Future
What listeners say about The Heat Will Kill You First
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- Nicola Twyning - ZCB64822
- 12-08-24
A grim, but important, picture of our present and future
Well presented research on life on this heating planet. A compelling listen. Beautifully read. Recommended.
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- Anonymous User
- 07-04-24
Eye opening book
I really liked this book. It’s so interesting to listen to the research and what has been discovered, so inspiring to support our ecology and take a very good care of the nature and our surroundings. Highly recommend reading/listening to this book.
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- AMacFhearraigh
- 01-09-23
Urgently making the invisible visible
The 'development' of human civilization over the last two to three centuries has been a complete path of ignorance while also being perceived as a path of hope. Due to the injustices perpetrated by greedy power hoarding humans upon other humans, achieving better quality of life via technological advance, labelled progress, was and is perceived to be the path of hope and salvation.
Commercialized science and engineering has discounted and continues to discount energy that has the form of heat when it makes up the highest percentage of all energy transformed by the modern technologies humans have developed powered by varieties of energy sources. We have developed technologies that are simply heat pumps i.e. heat amplifiers, by transforming energy dense materials into heat that is irresponsibly dumped into the common biosphere to be absorbed and stored where it influences other processes. Remember, it doesn't disappear, it flows to another store where it energises another process.
This contrasts sharply with evolution on Earth where the emphasis is to conserve energy within the Earth system as much as possible by minimising energy loss better known as heat. This process minimises entropy, a measure of randomness or disorder, to maintain a self-organised ordered living system far from thermodynamic equilibrium.
This book is an essential read for all to appreciate the importance of heat management and our enormous responsibility to minimise the reckless transformation of energy sources into heat. This of course is facilitated by the use of the commons of the biosphere as a reservoir for dumping this heat along with other heat forcing constituents and as thermodynamics informs, the temperature of this common reservoir rises as a result.
For this reason, minimisation of heat should be the foundation of all accounting, economics and governance, not maximising returns based on the amount of money hoarded. Equity and asset accounting needs to align with forms of energy that transform to other useful forms of energy using processes i.e. technologies/crafts, ensuring minimal energy loss in the form of heat. Wealth is thus conserved because useful forms of energy are being conserved.
I highly recommend this book that presents stories and examples of the consequences of the reckless misuse of heat amplifying energy sources and processes by the developed and developing nations under the guise of economic growth and progress. It highlights the delusional path of current human existence which cannot continue particularly if it incorporates reckless heat pollution irrespective of whether it is accompanied by heat entrapping pollutants. Accounting, economics and governance need to abandon the artificial virtual reality they've constructed and instead become grounded in the reality of managing energy stocks and flows incorporating vigilant respect for heat. For current life as we know it on Earth to continue to endure, there is no alternative.
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- M. J. Fielding
- 08-08-23
Anecdotes
Just a sequence of anecdotes around the heating theme. I was looking for something deeper. I had expected more from the book but nothing really came up.
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