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Hardcover ISBN: 0-8027-1557-5 ISBN 13: 978-0-8027-1557-9 Price: $25.95 304 pages Size: 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 July 2008
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The Carbon Age
How Life's Core Element has Become Civilization's Greatest Threat
Eric Roston
Reviews of The Carbon Age
"Fresh from six years covering technology, science, and energy for Time
magazine, Roston has written his first book--a winner and a keeper. He
begins by outlining the nuclear reactions that form carbon inside large
stars. Although schoolchildren commonly understand that carbon is the
skeletal element that holds biomass together and climate change
researchers know that the Earth's carbon cycle plays a major role as a
greenhouse gas, Roston sees carbon's abundance and widespread
distribution as an important starting point that creates an opportunity
for the synthesis of organic molecules and the creation of life itself.
Roston's assertion that carbon is generated by the nuclear fusion of
three helium nuclei is strongly supported by eminent scientists such as
Fred Hoyle, who was at Caltech in the 1950s. Hoyle disproved elements of
George Gamow's big bang hypothesis in 1953 by demonstrating that the
birthplace of the element carbon is the interior of stars that reach
temperatures of 100 million K (kelvin). The nuclear fusion origin of
carbon is convincing and understandable, though later chapters
addressing evolution, cyanobacteria, photosynthesis, and organic
molecules require patience and some chemical knowledge. However, the
final chapter becomes a convincing, easy read and offers a pathway to
sustainable living. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All
levels/libraries"—CHOICE
"Fascinating...Providing for the layman the 'connective tissue' of a vast
array of subdisciplines this US-centric monograph is a success,
especially in dealing with climate change. It is teeming with
unexpected information and is a grand tour of the universe."—Nature
"A high-level entry in the single-element history genre....Lucid and
occasionally disturbing."—Kirkus Reviews
"a convincing argument that the earth is at a crossroad, the time for
denial has passed and the time for smart, innovative solutions has
arrived.""—Publisher Weekly
"If atomic number 6 could ever write its autobiography, the result might
resemble Roston's engaging presentation."—Booklist
"gives readers a substantial context to the sound bytes concerning
climate change"—Margaret F. Dominy, Library Journal
Reviews
BYLINE: "Eric Roston's wonderful book, The Carbon Age, makes it
clear that we have had a gap in popular writing about energy, climate,
and the beauty of science. The imperatives before us to reduce carbon
emissions and think scientifically about our world are clearer than ever
before." —Dr. David Suzuki
"The story of carbon is our story, of course. It's an exciting
journey-from cyanobacteria through the old and new gingko tree, to the
intellectual wonder of organic synthesis, and our dangerous romance with
the internal combustion engine. Eric Roston is a super
storyteller!"—Roald Hoffmann, Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of
Humane Letters at Cornell University and 1981 Nobel Laureate in
Chemistry
"In order to understand the issue of climate change - or, for that
matter, almost any issue relating to energy and life-it's necessary to
understand carbon. Fortunately, it's an absolutely fascinating element,
as Eric Roston shows in this delightful book. His narrative is a
wonderful way to relish some basic science as well as understand some of
the most profound policy issues we face."—Walter Isaacson, CEO of
the Aspen Institute and author of Einstein: His Life and
Universe
"With delightful verve and zest, Roston explores the awesomely
cornucopian roles of carbon, ranging from cosmic to cellular, from
climate to cancer. He also makes a compelling case that human destiny
and carbon are now inextricably coupled."—Dudley Herschbach, 1986
Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
"If you thought oxygen was important, wait till you read this
brilliantly researched tale of carbon, the element that makes possible
diamonds, the 'lead' in your pencil, even 'you'- and the element that is
likely to occupy many headlines in the years ahead because we can't live
without it and we may not be able to live with it."—Norm
Augustine, former chairman and CEO, Lockheed Martin Corporation, and
chairman of the study, Rising Above the Gathering Storm
"Carbon neutral it isn't."—Bookends
"Carbon, the citizen king of elements, governs who we are and what life
is-but the king is going mad! Citizens, revolt against the despots, or
all may be lost!"—James E. Hansen, director of the NASA Goddard
Institute for Space Studies
"A most accessible and thoroughly enjoyable way to gain real insight
into a series of profoundly important subjects including, notably, the
hellish risks we now face with climate change. I liked this book and
plan to read it again."—James Gustave Speth, dean of Yale School
of Forestry and Environmental Studies and author of The Bridge at the
Edge of the World
"Eric Roston provides an unparalleled tour of carbon's role in life.
This is a journey that every reader will find surprising and thoroughly
enjoyable."—Richard A. Meserve, President of the Carnegie
Institution for Science
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