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Fifty Degrees Below
 
 

Fifty Degrees Below (Hardcover)

by Kim Stanley Robinson (Author)
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
List Price: CDN$ 35.00
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Fifty Degrees Below + Sixty Days and Counting + Forty Signs of Rain
Total List Price: CDN$ 75.99
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Earth continues its relentless plunge toward environmental collapse in Robinson's well-done if intensely didactic follow-up to Forty Signs of Rain (2004). As a result of global warming, the Gulf Stream has stalled, and when winter comes, impossibly frigid temperatures hit the Eastern Seaboard and Western Europe. As people starve, multinational corporations explore ways of making a profit from the disaster. When Antarctica's ice shelves collapse, low-lying island nations quite literally slip beneath the rising waters. In Washington, D.C., clear-sighted scientists must overcome government inertia and stupidity to put into effect policies that may begin to salvage the situation. An enormous fleet of ships is dispatched to the North Atlantic to dump millions of tons of salt into the ocean in the hope of restarting the Gulf Stream. This ecological disaster tale is guaranteed to anger political and economic conservatives of every stripe, but it provides perhaps the most realistic portrayal ever created of the environmental changes that are already occurring on our planet. It should be required reading for anyone concerned about our world's future.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From School Library Journal

Adult/High School–Picking up where Forty Signs of Rain (Bantam, 2004) leaves off, this second book in a planned trilogy finds Earth about to experience the most intense winter on record. Governments worldwide blithely go about their routines in spite of the monumental recent flooding in Washington, DC, and other areas around the globe. When the record-setting cold sets in, people begin freezing to death and starving due to crop failures. Large corporations and world governments use the crisis to attempt to rig elections and plan other agendas to tighten their hold on the public. Meanwhile scientists, especially those at the National Science Foundation, frantically search for a way to shift the weather patterns. The answer seems to be to jump-start the Gulf Stream to get it flowing again; the world watches as millions of tons of salt pour from ships into the ocean in this attempt. While the major plot of ecological chaos plays out, the subplots show how the effects of the weather changes, ecological turmoil, and governmental and big business assaults affect the various characters as they try to survive. This well-researched and expertly written novel about a future that might be coming true all too soon will hopefully serve as a wake-up call about Earths current serious situation.–Pam Johnson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Fifty Degrees Below
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Fifty Degrees Below 1.0 out of 5 stars (1)
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Big disappointment, Jul 17 2007
Purchased this book and "Forty Days of Rain" the prelude to this book hoping to add to a long list of authors. What a mistake. Having endured "Forty Days of Rain" I figured it could only get better, unfortunately not so. While the book touches on Global Warming there is too much filler with little or no relevance. I got the impression from both these books Robinson was more interested in filling pages as opposed to writing a good story. After 200 pages I finally gave up.
I take particular exception to the back cover which is misleading. The first paragraph describes erosion in San Diego and a flood in DC. One would expect these occurrences to be found in this book. They are not, you will find them in the last 50 or so pages of "Forty Days of Rain" if you can get through the 350 pages of meaningless stuff which precedes it.
Further they state on the back cover "Robinson continues his groundbreaking trilogy of eco-thrillers". If your looking for anything close to a thriller don't waste your time here.
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