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5 Green Books to Buy for Christmas

Posted: 12/07/11 05:57 PM ET

Here are some green book gift giving ideas for Christmas: Whether you are buying for a business executive who needs to make the company more sustainable (hint, hint), a young environmental activist who wants to change the world, or an MBA student eager to be in the loop, here are some important book ideas to help them inspire change. Some are available in hard copy, others as e-books.

1. American Earth is a book every green-inclined person needs on their book shelf. Best read in hard copy, it's a collection of essays by some of the strongest environmental leaders America has known. Edited by Bill McKibben, it starts with the ecological musings of Henry David Thoreau -- read his essays on Walden Pond and you'll think you're talking with the Moneyless Man -- and it goes on to transect major eras in the environment movement in America, including recent essays by characters like Julia Butterfly Hill on what it was like living in that tree.

2. Silent Spring is a classic. Written by Rachel Carson, the book was a clarion call to the world, on why we need to wake up to the industrial pollution we are putting into our earth, and bodies. Ironically Carson died quite young in her 50s from breast cancer. Cancer was one of the things she spoke about as a result of environmental pollution.

3. Barefoot Bloggers is edited by me, and includes a collection of short chapters from some of the best green bloggers in the world, like Chris Tackett and Jennifer Hattam at TreeHugger, and Mike Kanellos from Greentech Media. The book is an important read for anyone who is interested in using the written word to fight for the environment. Chapters on writing for clean tech, and NGOs are helpful, and the guide includes tips on making money, and writing for various religious audiences, as well as good SEO practices.

4. Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth by Buckminster Fuller. He's inspired generations of thinkers, futurists designers, architects, and environmentalists. It's an extremely hopeful and inspirational book, giving tools and food for thought for steering Spaceship Earth into a sustainable future.

5. Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. This book by William McDonough and Michael Braungart published in 2002 is so critical to understanding sustainability in America that you'll be lost if you don't know what this book is about. Yes, you already know about recycling, but what about upcycling, or designing things to last? Cradle to Cradle takes on a whole new philosophy that mankind needs to embrace.

Karin Kloosterman is the editor and founder of Green Prophet, creating sustainable news for the Middle East.


 
 
 

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Here are some green book gift giving ideas for Christmas: Whether you are buying for a business executive who needs to make the company more sustainable (hint, hint), a young environmental activist wh...
Here are some green book gift giving ideas for Christmas: Whether you are buying for a business executive who needs to make the company more sustainable (hint, hint), a young environmental activist wh...
 
 
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12:50 PM on 12/13/2011
Hey, I want 5 suggestions too! Here are my 4th and 5th:
(4) 'The Delinquent Teenager Who Was Mistaken for the World's Top Climate Expert'. Long title, short book, riverting read on the murky machinations of the IPCC
(5) 'Climate: The Counter Consensus'. The author is a bit peeved by the so-called consensus of the alarmists, but at least he does a creditable assessment of the real science.
06:42 PM on 12/09/2011
I'd suggest these books:
(1) 'Al Gore A User's Manual'. To gain insight into one of the great heroes of the climate campaign.
(2) 'The Hockey Stick Illusion'. To gain insight into another one or two of the great heroes of the climate campaign.
(3) 'The Rational Optimist'. To cheer you up after reading (1) and (2), both of which are real downers
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
07:51 AM on 12/09/2011
a book that i really like, though it's not gren as such, whatever that means, but very educational is '' material world''
http://www.menzelphoto.com/books/mw.php
it shows us how people live the world over and how much stuff most of us have compared to them.
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sabelmouse
my micro bio is emty
07:47 AM on 12/09/2011
buying anything for christmas isn't green. STOP SHOPPING ! unless you NEED something of course. different thing.
07:48 PM on 12/08/2011
Check out "the Hand Sculpted House" and the Earthship series
09:42 PM on 12/07/2011
My favorite 2011 green book for children is Meadowlands: a wetlands survival story by Thomas F. Yezerski. http://richiespicks.pbworks.com/MEADOWLANDS
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Karin Kloosterman
Environment specialist
02:14 AM on 12/08/2011
Thanks for adding this. I would love for other readers of this post to add their favorite books to the list and then I can compile a larger reference.
06:38 PM on 12/07/2011
Re 'Silent Spring', I comment this post on the 'lies of Rachel Carson': http://www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/summ02/Carson.html
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Karin Kloosterman
Environment specialist
02:13 AM on 12/08/2011
SecondTime - Rachel Carson was a pioneer. The lack of scientific sources is what she was up against. Science is only now starting to report on the effects of pollution on our bodies, because it takes years, decades and properly formatted studies to bear any weight in peer-reviewed journals. Carson didn't have time for peer-reviewed journals. She was using her intuition, and in my eyes she was on the mark.
06:38 PM on 12/09/2011
You are being far too kind and generous to her, Karin. She was little more than a fantasist and a great deal of harm has flowed from her book.