Hope Dies Last
Visionary People Across the World, Fighting to Find Us a Future
The award-winning environmental journalist’s extraordinary, long-awaited portrait of hope and resilience as we face a fractured and uncertain future
In this profoundly human and moving narrative, the bestselling author of The World Without Us returns with a book ten years in the making: a study of what it means to be a human on the front lines of our planet’s existential crisis. His new book, Hope Dies Last, is a literary evocation of our current predicament and the core resolve of our species against the most precarious odds we have ever faced.
To write this book, Weisman traveled the globe, witnessing climate upheaval and other devastations, and meeting the people striving to mitigate and undo our past transgressions. From the flooding Marshall Islands to revived wetlands in Iraq, from the Netherlands and Bangladesh to the Korean DMZ and to cities and coastlines in the U.S. and around the world, he has encountered the best of humanity battling heat, hunger, rising tides, and imperiled nature. He profiles the innovations of big thinkers—engineers, scientists, conservationists, economists, architects, and artists—as they conjure wildly creative, imaginative responses to an uncertain, ominous future. At this unprecedented point in history, as our collective exploits on this planet may lead to our own undoing and we could be among the species marching toward extinction, they refuse to accept defeat.
Hope Dies Last fills a crucial gap in the global conversation: Having reached a point of no return in our climate confrontation, how do we feel, behave, act, plan, and dream as we approach a future decidedly different from what we had expected?
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
April 22, 2025 -
Formats
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781524746711
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781524746711
- File size: 4298 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
Starred review from April 1, 2025
A wide-ranging look at visionaries who are working on ways to lessen the worst effects of climate change. Having explored what the world would look like without humans, Weisman pays homage to the scientists, engineers, activists, and others who through efforts local and global are trying to undo harms our species has wrought. Weisman opens with an Iraqi engineer who, convinced that "impossible often masks a lack of imagination," has helped rebuild the critically important marshes at the mouth of the Tigris and Euphrates river system, possibly the biblical Garden of Eden. That vision of paradise may seem odd in a place now among the hottest on earth, owing to a warming regional climate, but the engineer broke through an embankment built under Saddam Hussein and did the job on his own hook. Soon, Weisman writes, "the rehydrated marshes were bright green," alive with long-absent birds. It's just one of many success stories chronicled in this impeccably written and thoroughly inspiring narrative. Oddly, some of those stories have hidden traps: The development of chemical fertilizers and of the Green Revolution kept billions of people from starving but added billions more to the planet, leading Weisman to note, "Too much of a good thing is simply that: too much." Some forces for good are perhaps unexpected--the U.S. Department of Defense, for one, which, as one researcher notes, is "willing to invest in very strange new ideas." One strange idea: "growing food from thin air and microbes." Another: tackling rising sea levels by enlisting cartoonists to simplify scenarios for policymakers. Yet another: drilling deep beneath the earth with a laserlike tool to tap into geothermal energy. It's mad-science stuff on its face but, Weisman assures, it all offers hope, and "hope is a prerequisite for...courage." Lively portraits of champions staving off the end of the world--or so we hope.COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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