Living in the Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler
Living in the Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler
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Living in the Long Emergency
Global Crisis, the Failure of the Futurists, and the Early Adapters Who Are Showing Us the Way Forward

Author: James Howard Kunstler

Narrator: David de Vries

Unabridged: 9 hr 46 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/03/2020


Synopsis

Forget the speculation of pundits and media personalities. For anyone asking “Now what?” the answer is out there. You just have to know where to look. In his 2005 book, The Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler described the global predicaments that would pitch the USA into political and economic turmoil in the 21st century—the end of affordable oil, climate irregularities, and flagging economic growth, to name a few. Now, he returns with a book that takes an up-close-and-personal approach to how real people are living now—surviving The Long Emergency as it happens. Through his popular blog, Clusterf**ck Nation, Kunstler has had the opportunity to connect with people from across the country. They’ve shared their stories with him—sometimes over years of correspondence—and in Living in the Long Emergency: Global Crisis, the Failure of the Futurists, and the Early Adapters Who Are Showing Us the Way Forward, he shares them with us, offering an eye-opening and unprecedented look at what’s really going on “out there” in the US—and beyond.Coming from all walks of life, the individuals you’ll meet in these pages have one thing in common: their stories acutely illustrate the changing realities real people are facing—and coping with—every day. In profiles of their fascinating lives, Kunstler paints vivid, human portraits that offer a “slice of life” from people whose struggles and triumphs all too often go ignored. With personal accounts from a Vermont baker, homesteaders, a building contractor in the Baltimore ghetto, a white nationalist, and many more, Living in the Long Emergency is a unique and timely exploration of how the lives of everyday Americans are being transformed, for better and for worse, and what these stories tell us both about the future and about human perseverance.

About James Howard Kunstler

James Howard Kunstler is the author of more than twenty books, both nonfiction and fiction, including The Geography of Nowhere, The Long Emergency, Too Much Magic, and the World Made By Hand series, set in a post-economic-collapse American future. Kunstler started his journalism career at the Boston Phoenix and was an editor and staff writer for Rolling Stone, before “dropping out” to write books. He’s published op-eds and articles in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, The Atlantic, and The American Conservative. He was born and raised in New York City but has lived in upstate New York for many years.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David

How will it end? Living in the Long Emergency is a fat sandwich of a book. The top piece (of the sandwich) is the expected endtimes scenario collection (what with the author being James Howard Kunstler), in which civilization is well on its way out, mostly of its own doing. In this version, the focus......more

Goodreads review by Alicia

Wow, that was a long and twisting road. I started this book thinking that had more to do with climate change and a future that was drastically different because of those effects (acidifying oceans, increasing storms and droughts, failing crops, rising temperatures and sea levels, etc.). It is not, a......more

Goodreads review by Randall

Peak Oil happened in 2005, after that it takes more and more money to refine oil from increasing poor product. EROI = Energy Return on Investment. In the 50’s EROI for oil was 100 to 1. Civilization to exist needs energy with at least an EROI 10 to 1. Now we are at 15 to 1. Shale oil has an EROI of......more

Goodreads review by Aaron

I was assigned the Long Emergency as required reading for a community college class. This was mid-2000’s and that book really opened my mind and changed the way I view the world around me. It made me change my habits. Reading Living in the Long Emergency during the Covid-19 pandemic situation was a......more

Goodreads review by Stephen

In 2005, James Howard Kunstler penned The Long Emergency, building on his earlier work as a critic of American urbanism to argue that in addition to being economically ruinous, the suburban experiment has placed the United States in a uniquely bad spot for the converging problems ahead, chiefly peak......more