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Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion

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2020 Read Harder Challenge > Task #15: Read a book about climate change

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message 1: by Book Riot (new)

Book Riot Community (book_riot) | 457 comments Mod
Use this space to discuss books you're reading or that might fit the 15th Read Harder task.


message 2: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. (narshkite) | 1413 comments Not sure if I will go with fiction Salvage the Bones or non-fiction The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History


message 5: by Amy J. (new)

Amy J. | 81 comments I'm probably going to read The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert for this prompt.


message 6: by Chrissy (new)

Chrissy I may go with The Secret Lives of Glaciers since the author visited my school this year.


message 7: by Milena (new)

Milena (milenas) | 104 comments Karen wrote: "The Overstory by Richard Powers - would this fit?

In nonfiction - This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate by Naomi Klein maybe."


Yes, The Overstory fits.


message 9: by Risa (new)

Risa (risa116) | 24 comments This is a helpful list from the Earth Day Network of "13 must-read books on climate change":


message 10: by Harper (last edited Dec 09, 2019 09:01AM) (new)

Harper | 36 comments The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming is a Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Choice nominee for 2019.


message 11: by Cassie (new)


message 12: by Shelley (new)

Shelley | 49 comments New York 2140 was a really good realistic look at how society will deal with climate change.


message 13: by Eliza (new)

Eliza (mommydiva79) | 21 comments Going with Fevered: Why a Hotter Planet Will Hurt Our Health -- And How We Can Save Ourselves (and I had to scroll through roughly 4,387 romance novels with Fevered in the title to find this on the GR list. LOL!


message 14: by Beth (new)

Beth | 15 comments Cassie wrote: "would The Southern Reach Trilogy count?"

It could, but I think a choice from Jeff VanderMeer that would fit better would be Borne


message 15: by Beth (new)

Beth | 15 comments I'm going to try Clade for this, but I've had The Overstory on my list for such a long time.

Anyone looking for other fiction selections for this task could check out just about anything from Paulo Bacigalupi


message 16: by Judith (last edited Dec 13, 2019 08:23AM) (new)

Judith Rich | 124 comments Probably going to go with The Seabird's Cry: The Lives and Loves of the Planet's Great Ocean Voyagers by Adam Nicholson, but in case I find there's not enough in it about climate change, I also have No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference: Illustrated Edition on Mt TBR (although I may use that for the YA non-fiction task)


message 17: by Gail (new)

Gail | 34 comments I'm looking The Death and Life of the Great Lakes by Dan Egan for this one, it was a UW-Madison Go Big Read pick (but I didn't get to at the time).


message 18: by Octavia (new)

Octavia Cade | 139 comments I just want to say that I read This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate by Naomi Klein earlier this year, for the 2019 Read Harder challenge (the business task), and it was OUTSTANDING.

I'd really recommend it for this task if you're on the fence about what to read.


message 21: by Rebecka (new)

Rebecka | 8 comments I recommend Maja Lunde's The History of Bees and The End of the Ocean, two works of fiction where the theme climate change is central to the stories. I particularly enjoyed the first one, The history of the bees.


message 22: by Book Riot (new)

Book Riot Community (book_riot) | 457 comments Mod
Hi everyone! Our rec post for this task is available now.


message 23: by Eden (new)

Eden (edengoff) | 8 comments It could be a double dipper!!
Judith wrote: "Probably going to go with The Seabird's Cry: The Lives and Loves of the Planet's Great Ocean Voyagers by Adam Nicholson, but in case I find there's not enough in it about climate ch..."


message 24: by Emerging (new)

Emerging Writer | 106 comments I have World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse by Lester R. Brown on my shelf and may do that one -- but have not yet decided.


message 25: by Hope (new)

Hope Nilges | 12 comments I’ve had Silent Spring by Rachel Carson in man to-read pile for a while. It’s not current but still seems largely relevant.


message 26: by Audra (new)

Audra (themonkeygirl) | 101 comments Here's another one I was able to pull from my TBR, Flight Behavior.


message 27: by Maddy (new)

Maddy Buell | 23 comments I'm going to wait for Our House is On Fire to come out - Greta Thunberg's memoir.


message 28: by Marie (last edited Jan 02, 2020 11:15PM) (new)

Marie (marier) | 140 comments Just read in The New Yorker (my literary magazine!) that Gun Island is about climate change. It's literary fiction with elements of folklore and mystery.


Leslie (updates on SG) (leslie_ann) | 153 comments Megan wrote: "Would The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming count?"

Definitely. It crushed my soul last year, but I think everyone needs to read this book.


message 30: by Candace (new)

Candace (candaceloves) | 142 comments This is tough one for me since I don't usually read books about climate change, but that's what this challenge is all about! I'm reading Don't Even Think About It: Why Our Brains Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change for this task.


message 31: by Mary (new)

Mary Vogt | 4 comments I can't recommend American War enough. Climate change is a major driver in the story, and the main character is a refugee if you want to double-dip.


message 32: by Kari (new)

Kari | 32 comments I do a lot of environmental work and lobbying and would love a rec that talks positively about changes and steps individuals can make to help. I work with people that have a lot of anxiety about climate change, and at times feel helpless. I'd love to give them something that empowers, rather than frightens. Not saying that fear isn't a powerful motivator and very necessary at times, but I think it can send some particularly anxious people into such despair they don't act at all.

So any recs that take a more positive, pro-active, here's-what-you-can-do spin on this topic?


message 33: by Jessica (new)

Jessica Samuelson | 21 comments Kari wrote: "I do a lot of environmental work and lobbying and would love a rec that talks positively about changes and steps individuals can make to help. I work with people that have a lot of anxiety about cl..."

Maybe one of these will work for you:



message 34: by Elise (new)

Elise Taylor | 44 comments I just finished The Age of Miracles, which -- surprisingly -- was basically about the way the changing climate affects a little girl's life when the climate change is due to the planet slowing down. What say y'all - think that counts? It's not the "real" climate change, but I don't know that the challenge requires it to be carbon-as-cause.


message 35: by Salwade (new)

Salwade | 14 comments The Water Knife could work for this.


message 36: by Jackie (new)

Jackie Elise wrote: "I just finished The Age of Miracles, which -- surprisingly -- was basically about the way the changing climate affects a little girl's life when the climate change is due to the pla..."

Oh I think you're fine. I don't think it has to be about real-world current-day climate change in order to count.


message 37: by Alexis (new)

Alexis | 34 comments Can I suggest these: The Dragon Quartet Omnibus, Volume 1?

I thought the premise of these was unique. Each book centres around a human-dragon pair, except that each dragon corresponds with one of the four elements and each one is spread throughout history in a way that tracks environmental degradation, from the first earth-oriented pair set in medieval Germany, to the water-based pair in an polluted future not so different from our own and eventually leading up to the pair based around fire in a far flung future where the Earth is ecologically devastated.

It actually kind of reminded me of Atlas Shrugged in some ways.

Then there's some time travel stuff that lets them interact with each other and the overall arc has a huge environmental focus.

If you're a fantasy geek, these might be a strong choice.


message 38: by Emily (new)

Emily Yelencich (em_yel) | 7 comments Is anyone reading We Are the Weather: Saving the Planet Begins at Breakfast? Thinking this will likely be my pick, although the fiction options are very enticing!


message 39: by Bee (new)

Bee (mxmurray) | 3 comments Has anyone found a book by a queer author for this one?


message 40: by Sonia (new)

Sonia Mcintosh Hope wrote: "I’ve had Silent Spring by Rachel Carson in man to-read pile for a while. It’s not current but still seems largely relevant."

Silent spring is more about pesticides and not climate change. A good read though!


message 41: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. (narshkite) | 1413 comments MMD wrote: "Has anyone found a book by a queer author for this one?"

You may want to check out Tentacle


message 42: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. (narshkite) | 1413 comments Kari wrote: "I do a lot of environmental work and lobbying and would love a rec that talks positively about changes and steps individuals can make to help. I work with people that have a lot of anxiety about cl..."

How about How to Give Up Plastic: A Guide to Changing the World, One Plastic Bottle at a Time?


message 43: by Bee (new)

Bee (mxmurray) | 3 comments Bonnie, that looks perfect! Thank you!


message 44: by Kari (new)

Kari | 32 comments Yes, Bonnie, exactly the kind of thing I’m looking for. Thank you.


message 45: by Bonnie G. (new)

Bonnie G. (narshkite) | 1413 comments MMD wrote: "Bonnie, that looks perfect! Thank you!"

Glad it works for people. These issues seem so big and baffling (one option for helping the planet always seems to make problems in another area) so I liked that this book was was really focused and practical in its approach. It helped me make better choices.


message 46: by Jessica (new)

Jessica (jessica_peter) | 75 comments I'm reading The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World right now as mentioned by another poster. . . and holy goodness is it ever a page turner. It's like a thriller, but horribly real!


message 47: by Rosemary (new)

Rosemary | 6 comments I recommend Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver for this category - fiction but all too realistic. I read it last year but if you haven't, it's a good choice.


message 48: by Rosemary (new)

Rosemary | 6 comments Audra wrote: "Here's another one I was able to pull from my TBR, Flight Behavior."

Good choice! I read it last year so it wouldn't work for me, but it definitely fits.


message 49: by AJ (new)

AJ (mysticslinky) | 34 comments I'm wondering if Dune by Frank Herbert would work for this. What do you think?


message 50: by Carol (last edited Jan 26, 2020 01:46PM) (new)

Carol | 11 comments I have three books by Robert Macfarlane on my TBR pile.- The Old Ways: A Journey on Foot, Underland and The Wild Places. Is any of them a good choice for this challange? My other choices are The Water Knife or The Overstory. Decisions, decisions!!!


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