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41 pages 1 hour read

Hope Jahren

The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where to Go from Here

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2020

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Part 4, Chapter 18Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Part 4: “Earth”

Part 4, Chapter 18 Summary: “The Big Good-Bye”

Jahren introduces the Pontificia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS), a laboratory in Brazil that is documenting the many thousands of species of flora and fauna within the country’s borders. The PUCRS lab is particularly interested in recording and documenting freshwater fish, as these species are the “canary in the coal mine” (157). When fish species decline in freshwater habitats, it sounds alarm bells for all other related flora and fauna. What is increasingly disturbing in Brazil and around the rest of the Earth is the quick decline of species.

While extinction is a normal process—most species survive for about 10 million years before going extinct—the rate of extinction in the 20th and 21st centuries has greatly accelerated. Mass extinctions have occurred in the distant past, but they were rare events until now: “Based on the rate of decline and disappearance of species today we fear that we are currently on the verge of the sixth mass extinction” (159). The species under threat include both plants and animals. By 2050, the Earth may lose around 25% of its current species.

Part 4, Chapter 18 Analysis

Like the previous 17 chapters, this chapter drops many statistics onto the reader, creating an effect of doom and gloom. Jahren does not explain how and why these species are dying, and her swift and short writing style leaves the reader to ponder the reason for such loss of plant and animal life. In the following chapter, Jahren does mention briefly that the best way to protect a species and prevent its extinction is to protect its habitat. The best method to securing and protecting species habitat is setting land aside as nature preserves.

Jahren’s narrative follows a linear path that characterizes many books about global warming, population growth, and environmental decline. In doing so, it seeks to impart fear and anger before offering a few solutions. Some might dislike Jahren’s bird’s eye approach to discussing climate change, which glosses over complex global issues. Others may appreciate the quick clip at which Jahren delivers information; The Story of More is ultimately a survey that provides hard facts, numbers, and clever prose.

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By Hope Jahren