Review by Brit McGinnis Rewild Yourself: Making Nature More Visible in our Lives by Simon Barnes teaches people how to integrate more nature into their everyday lives. Not strictly a book about hiking, birdwatching, canoeing, or traveling for the sake of interacting...
How could a book with this main title not be a beautiful book. Visually and narratively, On Beauty, by Tom Butler and Sandra Lubarsky, with principal photography by Antonio Vizcaino, presents a wonderful ode to Doug Tompkins, one of the world’s greatest conservation...
Climate of Hope: How Cities, Businesses, and Citizens Can Save the Planet does something very constructive when it comes to climate change; it sets out to take us from a place of doom and gloom to one of optimism and hope. Complex Issue, Dozens of Solutions Michael...
With this mind blower of a book, be ready to be humbled. Experience awe. Left feeling sorrow, even anger that might fuel you to action. Activist, philosopher and author Derrick Jensen hopes so. With fiery style, Jensen keeps his readers close as he doggedly challenges...
Today, our modern lifestyle includes so many ways to get things done faster and make life more convenient. Zero Waste Home: The Ultimate Guide to Simplifying Your Life by Reducing Your Waste by Bea Johnson helps us recognize the huge impact our way of life has on the...
@Paula_JKnight And trying to heal your inner child by having a child is a selfish act. To put that on a kid sure is not thinking about the kid first. One can argue that a person is not ready to have a kid Until they deal with healing their own inner child. #pronatalism
As you know ; ) points to the deep #pronatalist assumption that we are all supposed to want children. If we think we don't, we also don't know our own mind, bcz we will eventually realize we do want them. Hogwash, but so ingrained! twitter.com/ChildFreeBC/st…