Impasse, Roy Scranton
Impasse, Roy Scranton
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Impasse
Climate Change and the Limits of Progress

Author: Roy Scranton

Narrator: Paul Heitsch

Unabridged: 11 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/10/2026


Synopsis

A Next Big Idea Club "Must Read" for August 2025!Extreme heat, fires, floods, and storms are transforming our planet. Yet we get increasing emissions, divisive politics, and ersatz solutions that offer more of the same: more capitalism, more complexity, more "progress."The impasse we face is not only political and institutional, but cognitive, existential, and narrative. We're incapable of grasping the scale, speed, and impact of global warming. And we optimistically cling to a narrative that promises a better tomorrow if we just keep doing what we're doing.It's past time to free ourselves from our dangerous and dogmatic faith. Such unwarranted optimism will accelerate our disintegration. If we want to have hope for the future, it must be grounded in a recognition of human limits—a view Scranton calls ethical pessimism.Scranton describes the challenges we face in making sense of our predicament, from problems in communication to questions of justice, from the inherent biases in human perception to the difficulties of empirical knowledge. What emerges is a challenging but hopeful proposition: if we have the courage to accept our limits, we may find a way to embrace our future.

About Roy Scranton

Roy Scranton has been a dishwasher, truck driver, phone psychic, caregiver, door-to-door canvasser, telemarketer, soldier, short-order cook, fry cook, and journalist. He is the author of Learning to Die in the Anthropocene, the novel War Porn, and the essay collection We're Doomed. Now What? He has been awarded a Whiting Fellowship and a Lannan Literary Fellowship, among other honors, and holds a PhD in English from Princeton. He lives in Indiana, where he teaches at the University of Notre Dame.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lars on October 23, 2025

Humble and realistic antidote to the still prevailing view of climate change as something to be 'solved' through a combination of technological innovation and political will.......more

Goodreads review by tonia on November 15, 2025

(All books get 5 stars.) Scranton argues that optimism and a belief in progress are actually keeping us from an ethical response to climate change realities. He outlines the fallacies of believing that things will somehow get better, that someone somewhere will save us from the trajectory of destruc......more

Goodreads review by Nikita on December 07, 2025

I think I was not the target audience for this book. I have forever been consuming media answering the question this book asks - how to live ethically in a world of suffering with limited power and knowledge. This was a little more abstract ("what do we mean by human? what do we mean by world?") tha......more