Anish Krishnan Krishnan itibaren Tayvan, 台南市中西區法華里
i thought that this book was good because it was real , it was also dramatic but it told you about the life of a teenanger doing everything he can to keep himself and his younger brother out of "the system".
A history of the steps leading to the discovery and acceptance of global warming. It's interesting to see how it happened, slowly, and more recently than some of us realize (those of us born not so terribly long ago). One of the main things I took away from the book was how the discovery and subsequent research was slowed by many factors including having little commercial/industrial appeal, disbelief that humans could ever permanently alter the climate because the resources and flexibility of the Earth are seemingly infinite, and the expertise required for this kind of research must come from a broad array of scientific fields.
Well that was well-written but not much of a surprise. I think Johns has a good handle on the characters but it feels like he had to shoehorn this into the greater "event" plotline, so it doesn't come as much of a shock how this turned out. Or perhaps it's just a question of when this "set of momentous moments" will get forgotten in favour of some future event or whim. Maybe I'd feel more oomph if the villains had half a brain cell between them here and took one action that seemed coordinated with any other villain. Decent art, a little cartoony but it services the action well enough.