by PhebaAndThePilgrim » Wed 22 Mar 2006, 10:38:50
Good day from Pheba:
The problem I find with peak oil books is that they are like potato chips. You can't read just one. The entire concept hits like a freight train, so you have to keep reading.
The entire concept seems surreal at first. Then as it sinks in, it becomes like a bad habit. You have to keep reading.
All of it seems like some bad dream that has burst the bubble of our make-believe world.
Daniel Quinn's "Ishmael" was actually the first book I read that began my awakening.
The second book I read was "Taliban" by Rashid. What a hard read. I had to read the book twice because I just did not understand, no, that's not right. I refused to comprehend what was really happening.
My next book was "The Party's Over". My world finally crumbled. I felt like Alice, crawling back out of the rabbit hole.
Personally, I don't think reading just Peak Oil books can accurately give a person the grasp of what is really going on.
Here is a list of books I have read, and how they have helped me grasp the concept in a bigger way.
"Oil, Power and Empire": Iraq and the U.S. Global Agenda" by Larry Everest. A very good book, easy to read.
"Party's Over and Powerdown. Make sure and get the 2nd edition of Party's Over. Heinberg had some errors in first edition that he corrected in second edition. My hubby and I are farmers. He had errors on farming corn acreage in first edition. We e-mailed him and asked him about them. He was so gracious, a delightful, modest, honest person. He explained that 2nd edition is updated with correction.
"the Stork and the Plow" by Ehrlich and Daily. A necessary book to understand the impact of population on our energy problems.
"The Official Guide to the X-Files". Volumes 1-6. When all of this reality gets to be too much.
"Entropy" or "Entropy Into the Greenhouse World" by Jeremy Rifkin. Both out of print, but on E-Bay. The absolute most important basic information to learn: The first and second law of thermodynamics.
"The Geography of Nowhere" by Kunstler. Sorry folks, but I like this book better than Kunstler's "Long Emergency". I like Kunstler, but I did not like his pro-war stance in Long Emergency, and I feel he tried to cover too much in one book with Long Emergency, so he just fell short.
"Hubbert's Peak by Deffeyes, and "The View From Hubbert's Peak"
"Earth Odyssey" by Mark Hertsgaard. Not an oil book, but an eye opener of the natural consequences of our energy sucking world. heart-wrenching
"Twlight In the Desert". An eye opener, but I wish somebody would have explained to Mr. Simmons that most people are not in the oil business and would have a difficult time understanding his technical terms. A glossary would have made all the difference in the world.
"This Place On Earth" by Alan Thein Durning. A beautiful book. In one chapter Durning describes the energy used just to give him his cup of morning coffee. A real eye opener.
"Blowback" by Chalmers Johnson and "The Sorrows of Empire" by Chalmers Johnson. "Blowback" is an awesome book.
"High Noon For Natural Gas" by Julian Darley
"Resource Wars" by Michael T. Klare. For some reason this book is often overlooked in a list of peak oil books. Written in 2001, this book still paints a very clear picture of our growing conflicts over natural resources, mainly oil and water.
I have read tons more, but can't remember them right now. Just pick five.
Personally , I found it necessary to also read books on politics and population and global warming. All of these problems tie in.
Just remember to take time out to read X-Files, or whatever, when it all gets to be too much.
Pheba