
The World Without Us
“A morbidly fascinating nonfiction eco-thriller.”
New York Times Book Review
A Time Magazine Top 10 Book of the Year
An AudioFile Best Audiobook of the Year
An ALA Notable Book in Nonfiction
An Entertainment Weekly Best Book of the Year
A Barnes & Noble Top 10 Books Pick of the Year
A 2007 Kansas City Star Top 100 Book for Nonfiction
Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award
Winner of Publishers Weekly Listen Up Awards: Best in Category, 2007
Winner of iTunes Best Audiobooks, 2007
Among longlisted titles for AudioFile Best Audiobooks, 2007
Winner of ALA Notable Books - Winner, 2008
Winner of Publishers Weekly Listen Up Awards: Best in Category, 2007
Winner of iTunes Best Audiobooks, 2007
Among longlisted titles for AudioFile Best Audiobooks, 2007
Winner of ALA Notable Books - Winner, 2008
Discover the impact of the human footprint in The World Without Us. Take us off the Earth and what traces of us would linger? And which would disappear? Alan Weisman writes about which objects from today would vanish without us; how our pipes, wires, and cables would be pulverized into an unusual (but mere) line of red rock; why some museums and churches might be the last human creations standing; how rats and roaches would struggle without us; and how plastic, cast-iron, and radio waves may be our most lasting gifts to the planet.
But The World Without Us is also about how parts of our world currently fare without a human presence (Chernobyl; a Polish old-growth forest, the Korean DMZ) and it looks at the human legacy on Earth, both fleeting and indelible. It's narrative nonfiction at its finest, taking an irresistible concept with gravity and a highly-readable touch.
Some examples of what would happen:
· One year: Several more billions birds will live when airplane warning lights cease blinking.
· Twenty years: The water-soaked steel columns that support the street above New York's East Side would corrode and buckle. As Lexington Avenue caves in, it becomes a river.
· 100,000 years: CO2 will be back to pre-human levels (or it might take longer).
· Forever: Our radio waves, fragmented as they may be, will still be going out.
Praise
