Silent Spring (Penguin Modern Classics)

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Rachel Carson: Silent Spring (Penguin Modern Classics) (2000, Penguin Books Ltd)

336 pages

Published Sept. 28, 2000 by Penguin Books Ltd.

ISBN:
978-0-14-118494-4
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(2 reviews)

This account of the effects of pesticides on the environment launched the environmental movement in America.

36 editions

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This book is heartbreaking. It really needs to be read by every American high school student. It hits hard with valuable critique, and then offers heartening examples of successes that could lead the way forward, and terminates with a warning of our own species being terminated, if we are not careful, by the very bugs we are so often trying to wipe out, ineptly, with disastrous and often ironic boomerang effects. She essentially told us to stop being adolescents, to grow up, and to start thinking ahead before using blanket technologies, which would seem eminently reasonable, if we were a mostly reasonable species. I'm beginning to have to question that old assumption, these days, and I see that that may haave really beein what this book was all about, fromthe very start.
Ugh.
Nia

Review of 'Silent Spring' on 'Goodreads'

I remember hearing about the book "Silent Spring" by Rachel Carson in my fifth grade science class. The story of a women scientist who sounded the warning about the danger of pesticides and chemicals in the environment was told almost like a legend. Indeed, the book itself has had an impact far beyond its content. It ranks as one of the most influential books of the 20th century and one of the few works in human history that can be said to have a direct impact on how we live and understand our world. The books reputation is well-deserved. It is a damning critique of modern society and our over-reliance on technology, chemicals, and poisons to attempt to dominate and control nature. Carson concludes that, like the threat of nuclear war, humanity's use of increasingly deadly forms of toxic chemicals in agriculture put into the power of our own destruction …