📰 Weekend Read — Grist and Drying World

I happened upon a New York Times article titled This New Year, Resolve to Green Up Your News Feed, which recommended the climate news website Grist. Highlighting climate solutions and climate justice, Grist works “to show that a just and sustainable future is within reach.” Even as it provides much-needed encouraging news—Indigenous people defending their land and fighting for climate justice, for instance, or a new insurance model for flood-prone communities—this site’s reporting pulls no punches in revealing underreported bad news or efforts toward sustainability that just aren’t panning out. ...

January 5, 2025 Â· 1 min Â· Plant Futures DKU

📰 Weekend Read — Veganuary, Extreme Heat and More Beans

Veganuary The logo for Veganuary This week, I stumbled upon a rather intriguing article, Meat-eaters more likely to be disgusted by meat after taking part in Veganuary, study reveals. The premise, as outlined by the Guardian, is that: Meat-eaters who abstain to take part in Veganuary are more likely to think that meat is disgusting after giving it up for the month, researchers have found. Studies by psychologists at the University of Exeter also found that some people identify less as meat-eaters after trying to avoid animal products during January. ...

December 28, 2024 Â· 3 min Â· Plant Futures DKU

📚 Weekend Read — H Is for Hope By Elizabeth Kolbert

The cover of H is for Hope by Elizabeth Kolbert We’ve talked before about Elizabeth Kolbert, a writer whose words have reshaped how many of us see the planet we inhabit, her voice, sharp and measured, carrying the weight of a climate in crisis. This week, I read her latest book, H Is for Hope, a brief but potent meditation on the precariousness of our existence. The audiobook, which I listened to, clocks in at just over ninety minutes, far shorter than Kolbert’s previous works, but that’s intentional. Ordinary citizens don’t need endless pages of data — we need to feel, to feel the crisis as something visceral, immediate. ...

December 21, 2024 Â· 2 min Â· Plant Futures DKU

📰 Weekend Read — Food as You Know It Is About to Change By David Wallace-Wells

Photo by amine photographe Last weekend, I introduced Elizabeth Kolbert, one of my favorite climate and environmental writers. This week, I’d like to recommend David Wallace-Wells, the author of The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming. This book really opened my eyes to just how serious the challenges of climate change are. The idea of more than 2 degrees of warming by 2100 is grim, but I appreciate what David said in an interview: ...

December 14, 2024 Â· 3 min Â· Plant Futures DKU

📰 Weekend Read — When the Arctic Melts by By Elizabeth Kolbert

I’m starting a new weekend tradition of recommending authors and articles that spark curiosity and reflection on our world’s future. Iceberg in Greenland. Photo by Jean-Christophe André This week, I recommend Elizabeth Kolbert’s When the Arctic Melts from The New Yorker. (Link to the Internet Archive) Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History and Under a White Sky: The Nature of the Future, has a gift for exploring humanity’s impact on the natural world. Her writing combines scientific insight with moments of unexpected humor and hope. ...

December 8, 2024 Â· 2 min Â· Plant Futures DKU