Top Sellers

List Price: £3.95
Our Price: £0.39
Author: Nicky Scott
By Green Books

Average rating of 5/5 Essential, 2007-08-17
This nice little book is essential to those who want to minimize the impact of their consuming in the environment.

Very easy to read and printed ( guess ) in recycled paper with very useful guide is very informative about ways of reducing the amount of things that we send to the rubbish bin every week.

The book features an A to Z guide of all the items that can recycle from cars to jars and many different ways of reducing what can not be recycled.

Even if you live in a flat in the city and you have no access to a compost bin this book will illustrate how to stop generating rubbish.I found the chapter about " Office " particularly helpful.

Independently of your beliefs on global warming and politics ,there is argument that consuming less natural resources is in everyone's interest.

I can not wait for the next edition due out this year.

5 stars

List Price: £15.00
Our Price: £4.49
Author: Provokateur
By Fourth Estate Ltd

Average rating of 5/5 At last... an eco book with a sense of humour, 2008-09-05
Love this book. Bought it on the off chance that it would get our office a bit more motivated about green issues. We spent the afternoon drooling over the design, fighting about who would get the posters and putting stickers in inappropriate places. Idle pleasures with an eco conscience. Result.

List Price: £14.99
Our Price: £11.49
Author: D.H. Meadows, Jorgen Randers, Dennis L. Meadows
By Earthscan Ltd

Average rating of 5/5 When demand outstrips supply, 2005-09-26
Overshoot: when demand overtakes supply.

I recall buying the original edition of this book back in 1972, and also recall the rubbishing it got from those who believed it was all scare mongering.

The events of the 1970's should have acted as wake-up call, but they now seem like a distant memory: the three-day-week, the power cuts, the petrol rationing coupons (never implemented).

Since 1972, growth has been given a huge boost by globalisation, and the take-offs in China and India.

When this book was published in its 1992 edition - 'Beyond the Limits' - the authors warned that unsustainability was already evident: deforestation, climate change, the ozone hole.

They point to the failure of various international summits to get a grip on the problem.

It seems that our elites are vaguely aware that there is a problem here, and mention it in passing to give the impression that they on the case. It is usually on the list of the many things the Prime Minister is going to sort out before dinner.

The Kyoto protocols were some sort of triumph. But the developing nations, like China and India were not included and George W Bush doesn't seem to be persuaded that there's a problem.

The lack of urgency is widespread: as the victims of Katrina and Rita now know better than the rest of us.

Yet it's all something we know. We all know, for example, that the oil is going to dry up some day, but what the heck? It won't be next week, will it?

But someday it is going to be someone else's next week.

When that time comes, all the lost local skills will suddenly be missed. For that is what it will be: a return to the local economy. Your food, your shelter, your clothing, will all have be sourced locally. In the UK's case it's drop-back over two hundred years, minus the skills that were around in those days.

So, for the third time since 1972, the authors lay it all before us: what needs to be done.

First, and most painfully, there is no time to be lost:

"The longer the world economy takes to reduce its ecological footprint and move towards sustainability, the lower the population and material standard of living that will be ultimately supportable. At some point delay means collapse."

In the chapter "Transitions to a Sustainable System" the authors show us just how dramatic the changes need to be.

They offer our elites the chance to start the changes now, while there is time to manage the changeover.

They all make sense, but they require something more than political action, they require an end to individualism as we have known it. This is the leap many people will not be able to make

Out must go the competition for individual power, status, and wealth which are the engines of the current society. Reflect on that: and you see the enormity of the task.

List Price: £34.99
Our Price: £31.13
By Longman

Average rating of 5/5 Simply Essential, 2006-03-12
This book, written by the best of the best at UEA ENV, covers almost every subject required for any Environmental Science course. It leads perfectly onto more detailed areas but still gives a pretty comprehensive view of everything it covers in an easily accesable way. Quite simply it is essential, and with great reviews from such people as James Lovelock and HRH The Prince of Wales there isn't much more to say.

List Price: £8.99
Our Price: £4.31
Author: Alastair McIntosh
By Birlinn Ltd

Average rating of 5/5 Climate for Change, 2008-10-03
I've just finished reading Hell and High Water. It was an exhilarating, if not exactly comfortable, read. Alistair McIntosh says at one point how hard parts of it were to write. Climate change is an important matter but what makes this exploration of the problem and its solutions, is that it is about us.

This book unravels how the human condition, how we are and how we live now, underscores it all. Undeniably we live disconnected and incomplete lives for all our stuff. Of course we do deny it and the message of the book is to wake up, understand the addictive behaviours of the human race and move beyond it. Arguing about whether climate change is really our fault is tantamount to rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic. We have lost touch with something fundamental in our headlong rush to have rather than be. This is the brokenness which drags us down. Climate change sits there along with war, waste, pollution and poverty: all by-products of human dysfunction. We can fix nothing unless we fix ourselves. Reading this book (and acting on it) can be a step in that direction.

List Price: £14.99
Our Price: £1.49
Author: Al Gore
By Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Average rating of 5/5 Mind blowing!, 2008-09-08
Everybody should watch this. I'm a bit of a cynic at times but I was amazed at the effort put into this film and its effect on me. Certainly all schools should show this (or the younger age version) to their children. Nobody can be an ostrich anymore. This film is dynamite!

Al Gore (and associates) deserve all the money they make from this outstanding film report. What a pity he didn't make president and we have had to put up with the worse ever idiot president of the USA, Bush the Buffoon. But hey, even worse is on the horizon. McCain and an incredibly ludicrous woman called Palin, who believes the earth was created just six thousand years ago and Noah saved all the animals of the planet, and she doesn't believe in global warming. God help us - whatever God that is you support!

List Price: £10.99
Our Price: £4.03
Author: Victoria Boutenko
By Raw Family Publishing,US

Average rating of 5/5 RAW this is good, 2008-02-22
Ive been a personal trainer for a while now and ive always questioned our so called correct nutrition, when i read this it made more sense then any textbook ive read and so now ive incorporated it into my diet, im not fully raw yet but i plan to be by end of year.
great read and insightful.
give this a read and it might just open your eyes or at least start the process.


List Price: £19.99
Our Price: £11.51
Author: Bjørn Lomborg
By Cambridge University Press

According to The Skeptical Environmentalist the hole in the Ozone Layer is healing. The Amazon has shrunk by only 14 per cent since the arrival of Man. Only 0.7 per cent of species will be driven to extinction over the next 50 years. Even the poorest humans are getting richer by the year. Things are not good enough; but they are far, far better than we have been taught to believe. Lomborg, a professor of statistics and a former Greenpeace member, reveals the complexity, confusion, and (rarely) misuse of data behind the current Litany of approaching environmental Armageddon. But this is not a comforting or reassuring read. Nor is it a bible for lackeys and do-nothings. Lomborg uses the same figures everyone else uses, from national governments to the Kyoto summit to Greenpeace. Rarely have the raw data been discussed in such detail: their history, how they are calculated, their strengths, and their weaknesses. Lomborg argues persuasively that our sense of approaching human and environmental disaster is an artefact of the valid work of modern scientific, environmental and media institutions. There is, he asserts, no one to blame for our growing sense of despair, but everything...
Average rating of 5/5 A truly excellent book, 2008-07-26
This is one of those books which change the course of things.

It is hugely impressive not only because of the absolutely massive amount of research involved, but because the entire work comes from someone who had, initially, entirely opposite convictions to those reflected in the book and had the intellectual honesty to understand that he was wrong, accept it and spread the word.

More notable is the book also for the unbelievable smearing campaign and the attempt at character assassination of which the author has been made object from his former companions, a truly sobering experience about the ways of "idealists","world savers" and apostles of "tolerance".

And mind, this is not someone just pretending to have been converted to sell a bit more; the author was very active in his academic milieu and certainly not the conservative type (openly and vocally leftist, openly and vocally homosexual). This gives the claims in the books, apart from the huge and ruthlessly accurate research - though the occasional mistake may have slipped here and there - the more credibility.

The environmental hype is now slowly ebbing down; common sense starts to prevail; the mayor of London with his ecoterrorist agenda (actually populism and class warfare with another name, as it is often the case) lost his job and all other british politicians listened to the message; in general, politicians have become more and more timid in trying to "look good" by imposing new taxes "to save the planet". This book shares a part of the merit.

Buy it and will you never regret it.








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