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Global Discontents
Global Discontents
Oct 7, 2024 8:27 PM

Author:Noam Chomsky,David Barsamian,Noam Chomsky,David Barsamian

Global Discontents

Penguin presents the audiobook edition of Global Discontents by Noam Chomsky, read by Noam Chomsky and David Barsamian.

Global Discontents is an essential guide to geopolitics and how to fight back, from the world's leading public intellectual

What kind of world are we leaving to our grandchildren? How are the discontents kindled today likely to blaze and explode tomorrow?

From escalating climate change to the devastation in Syria, pandemic state surveillance to looming nuclear war, Noam Chomsky takes stock of the world today. Over the course of ten conversations with long-time collaborator David Barsamian, spanning 2013-2016, Chomsky argues in favour of radical changes to a system that cannot possibly cope with what awaits tomorrow.

Interwoven with personal reflections spanning from childhood to his eighth decade of life, Global Discontents also marks out Chomsky's own intellectual journey, mapping his progress to revolutionary ideas and global prominence.

Reviews

If you've never read any Chomsky before, and you want to know what all the fuss is about, this book is a good place to start. Yet more evidence of why Chomsky deserves his position as one of the world's foremost intellectuals

—— The Times Literary Supplement

His flowing narrative is rich in stories of his fieldwork round the world ... Thomas's vision ... aspires to something nobler, more optimistic

—— Fred Pearce , New Scientist

Fascinating ... Chris Thomas examines our human relationships with nature, bad and good, and sets out a more hopeful truth to current narratives and alarms ... This is a rich and timely tale, fearless too, with examples and cases drawn from ecosystems across the world

—— Prof Jules Pretty , Times Higher Education

[A] thrilling and uplifting counter to the pessimism of the Anthropocene

—— Stuart Blackman , BBC Wildlife Magazine

A decent and humane tale about the threat and promise of biodiversity change

—— James Lovelock, author of 'The Revenge of Gaia' and 'A Rough Guide to the Future'

The most interesting / challenging / surprising thing I've read about the natural world for years

—— James Rebanks, author of 'The Shepherd's Life'

A provocative book that challenges us to look positively at our human changes to the natural world and reimagine conservation in the Anthropocene

—— Gaia Vince, author of 'Adventures in the Anthropocene'

Chris Thomas takes the million-year view of today's human-dominated world. The result is a thoughtful, provocative, and improbably hopeful book

—— Elizabeth Kolbert, author of 'The Sixth Extinction' and 'Field Notes from a Catastrophe'

With a perspective that stretches many epochs into the past and forward to the year One Million A.D., Thomas reframes Earth's current ecological upheaval as a time of great creation as well as great loss. Without minimizing or excusing the damage humans have done to the planet, Inheritors of the Earth opens our eyes to the splendid and fascinating ways nature is adapting and evolving to the world we have made. He urges us to take our cue from the majestic dynamism of nature and work with other species as they change and move, rather than fighting an impossible battle to freeze the planet in time. All change is not bad. I thought I was an optimist. Thomas is the real ecological optimist.

—— Emma Marris, author of 'Rambunctious Garden'

With Inheritors of the Earth, Chris D. Thomas issues a challenge to the conventional view of nature in decline. He urges us to embrace the environmental changes we've set in motion, daring to suggest that human activities will ultimately increase the diversity of life on Earth. A timely and provocative read

—— Thor Hanson, author of 'The Triumph of Seeds'

Provocative ... Filled with lovely anecdotes ... Remarkably clear

—— New York Times Book Review

An appealing patchwork of latest brain research, personal anecdote, journalistic reportage and sly but never cynical observation. It makes for a very readable mélange.

—— Literary Review of Canada

A book that explores why we hardly ever spend time on our own and why we should.

—— The Pool

In this beautifully wrought and engrossing meditation, Michael Harris observes how hard it is to find solitude in our buzzing, interconnected world.

—— Jury of the RBC Taylor Prize

We should remind ourselves that a life without solitude is a diminished life. What makes this book so valuable and so timely is that it serves both as a reminder of solitude’s worth and as a spur to resistance.

—— Nicholas Carr, author of THE SHALLOWS

There are now plenty of self-help books that recommend a balanced media diet, but none articulates than need as simply or profoundly as this exploration of solitude.

—— Bookseller

Michael Harris’s Solitude is a delightful reminder that, contrary to current wisdom, we cannot be fully human unless our minds are free to wander. An essential and spirited companion as our digital culture accelerates into the unknown.

—— Andrew Westoll, author of THE CHIMPS OF FAUNA SANCTUARY

Reading Harris’s book is like smashing your Google Glasses and looking through your unique lenses for the first time. This enjoyable, quirky probe into current brain science, psychology, and philosophy hugely contributes to the global ‘Great Turning’ toward a more diverse, durable future of freer people enjoying themselves more, both together and alone.

—— William Powers, author of NEW SLOW CITY: LIVING SIMPLY IN THE WORLD’S FASTEST CITY

This is an excellent book by a first-rate writer. Michael Harris brings his insight and eloquence to bear on one of the most insidious problems of our time: how to break free from the seductions of technology and reclaim our inner selves.

—— Deborah Campbell, author of A DISAPPEARANCE IN DAMASCUS

In a time of unrelenting connection, solitude becomes a radical act. It also becomes an essential one. Michael Harris makes a thoughtful and deeply felt case for why the art of spending quality time with oneself matters now more than ever – and the steps we can take to reclaim it.

—— Brian Christian, author of ALGORITHMS TO LIVE BY

She often finds herself dealing with the most macabre cases of murder. But the no-nonsense Scot is an upbeat character with a dry sense of humour, clearly identifiable in her memoir.

—— Hannah Stephenson , Daily Record

Ideal reading if you're a cheerful soul who likes to think about death. And think how it'll brighten your conversation on holiday.

—— The Times

Books of the Year

—— The Times

Best of the Year: Memoir
This book captures the profundity of human life while displaying a sense of humour, and peels back the skin to reveal a world few of us ever discover

—— The Sunday Times

Dame Sue Black, the woman who inspired the hit television show Silent Witness and has done for forensic science what Strictly has done for ballroom dancing, is an unlikely but deeply worthy national treasure.... Black's memoir, like her story, is curiously vibrant and life-affirming.

—— Alex Massie , Scottish Field

You can't help but warm to this retired professor of anatomy and forensic anthropology who chose "the many faces of death" as her medical speciality, yet is herself so vividly alive. Like [David] Nott, Black travelled the world at times, sifting maggots, bullets and human body parts in war zones. Despite it all, she remains convinced that our humanity transcends the very worst of which our species is capable.

—— Rachel Clarke author of forthcoming Dear Life

All That Remains provides a fascinating look at death - its causes, our attitudes toward it, the forensic scientist's way of analyzing it. A unique and thoroughly engaging book.

—— Kathy Reichs, author of TWO NIGHTS and the Temperance Brennan series

This fascinating memoir, dealing with everything from bodies given to medical science to the trauma caused by sudden, violent ends, offers reassurance, and even hope, to the fearful and cynical.

—— Alexander Larman , The Observer

A gripping natural-history detective story. Was Rist a cunning con-artist who more or less got away with the perfect, albeit clumsy crime? Or was he hopelessly addicted to feathers, to his hobby, and to his status as a young fly-tying protégé without the economic means to realise his dreams and potential?

—— Caught by the River

This well written account of the known facts is well worth a read

—— birdwatch Magazine

It was hard to put the book down… Read it yourselves, enjoy it and learn from it!

—— British Birds
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