Customer Reviews: Read 131 more reviews...
Of Silent Springs and Loudly Prophecies October 22, 2008 With this comedy masterpiece, Rachel Carson launched a thorough and successful assault on pesticides commonly used in agriculture. After nearly 45 years, DDT is no longer used. Every organism on the planet has what was once considered a lethal quantity of it in its cells and the human ones are still alive to whine about the worms in their raspberries.
Should you read this book? Yes. It's a thought-provoking indictment, and, like The Jungle 60 years before it, helped shape the world in which we now live. I only wish that all you young, unshaven tree-huggers would understand that panic-peddling is a business just like everything else. Some want to sell you books, others "organic" fruit and others still want to ride panic where politics failed them like a certain secretary of vice presidency or whatever it was Gore did in the 90s.
Ahead of its time. September 30, 2008 This book is more than I expected it to be. It is way ahead of its time and makes an important contribution to the environmental movement.
Excellent! July 16, 2008 The book was delivered in good condition and in a timely fashion. I am very pleased with your services.
What about malaria in Africa? January 28, 2008 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
While Rachel's theories were ahead of her time 40 years ago, many now believe DDT is not the toxin/poison that her book helped label the chemical as. One thing is for SURE: malaria kills millions, including children, in Africa each and every year. DDT could prevent those deaths at a very affordable cost. Malaria in Africa -- one of those unseen ripples in the pond....
the beginning of environmental science January 18, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
An amazing woman and book: the beginning of the us taking responsibility for pollution thanks to this book.
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