A New York Times Editors’ Choice
Named a Best Book of the Year in The New Yorker, Publishers Weekly, Chicago Tribune, and EcoLit Books
A USA Today Must-Read Summer Book
"David Lipsky spins top-flight climate literature into cliffhanger entertainment." —Zoë Schlanger, New York Times Book Review
The New York Times best-selling author explores how “anti-science” became so virulent in American life—through a history of climate denial and its consequences.
In 1956, the New York Times prophesied that once global warming really kicked in, we could see parrots in the Antarctic. In 2010, when science deniers had control of the climate story, Senator James Inhofe and his family built an igloo on the Washington Mall and plunked a sign on top: AL GORE'S NEW HOME: HONK IF YOU LOVE CLIMATE CHANGE. In The Parrot and the Igloo, best-selling author David Lipsky tells the astonishing story of how we moved from one extreme (the correct one) to the other.
With narrative sweep and a superb eye for character, Lipsky unfolds the dramatic narrative of the long, strange march of climate science. The story begins with a tale of three inventors—Thomas Edison, George Westinghouse, and Nikola Tesla—who made our technological world, not knowing what they had set into motion. Then there are the scientists who sounded the alarm once they identified carbon dioxide as the culprit of our warming planet. And we meet the hucksters, zealots, and crackpots who lied about that science and misled the public in ever more outrageous ways. Lipsky masterfully traces the evolution of climate denial, exposing how it grew out of early efforts to build a network of untruth about products like aspirin and cigarettes.
Featuring an indelible cast of heroes and villains, mavericks and swindlers, The Parrot and the Igloo delivers a real-life tragicomedy—one that captures the extraordinary dance of science, money, and the American character.
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WW Norton)
Praise for Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself
"Lipsky’s transcript of their brilliant conversations reads like a two-man Tom Stoppard play or a four-handed duet scored for typewriter."
— Lev Grossman, Time
"Exhilarating…All that’s left now are the words on the page, with the voices they conjure of two writers talking, talking, talking as they drive through the night."
— Laura Miller, Salon
"Crushingly poignant…The rapport that Lipsky and Wallace built during the course of the road trip is both endearing and fascinating. At the end, it feels like you’ve listened to two good friends talk about life, about literature, about all of their mutual loves. While they were both young men in 1996, they seem wise beyond their years, yet still filled with a contagious, youthful enthusiasm…a startlingly sad yet deeply funny postscript to the career of one of the most interesting American writers of all time.”
— Michael Schaub, National Public Radio
"Totally fascinating…Pretty much ideal…One of the effects of Wallace’s prose is to make you irrationally want to be his best friend, and Lipsky creates a simulacrum of that experience."
— Sam Anderson, New York
"For readers unfamiliar with the sometimes intimidating Wallace oeuvre, Lipsky has provided a conversational entry point into the writer’s thought process. It’s odd to think that a book about Wallace could serve both the newbies and the hard-cores, but here it is…You get the feeling that Wallace himself might have given Lipsky an award for being a conversationalist…We have the pleasure of reading two sharp writers who can spar good-naturedly with one another."
— Seth Colter Walls, Newsweek
"Lovely."
— Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal
"Part biography, part autobiography, and part meditation on what it means to be a man in modern-day America."
— Rachel Syme, National Public Radio (Best Books of the Year)
Praise for Absolutely American
"Duty, Honor, Casual Sex: Plain American hedonism is powerful at West Point, David Lipsky found, but so are discipline and self-sacrifice…A superb description of modern military culture, and one of the most gripping accounts of university life I have read. This book must have been extremely hard to organize, and yet it reads with a novelistic flow. How teenagers get turned into leaders is not a simple story, but it is wonderfully told in this book."
— David Brooks, New York Times Book Review (front cover)
"David Lipsky's up close and personal account of life at West Point is a national service. It takes the reader deep inside one of America's most important institutions."
— Tom Brokaw
"Addictive…a story that could inspire even nonmilitary buffs to follow the cadets’ careers like those of their favorite sports heroes.”
— Newsweek
"A fascinating, funny and tremendously well written account of life on the Long Gray Line. Take a good look: this is the face America turns to most of the world, and until now it’s one that most of us have never seen."
— Time (Best Books of the Year)
"Masculinity has traditionally been associated with the military. Absolutely American, which vividly traces West Point cadets through their four years at the Academy, deals with both sexes and tells a lot about the changing definitions and conditions of masculinity and femininity in the new century."
— Elaine Showalter, Washington Post Book World
"Illuminating…Lipsky has done a distinguished service to a proud school."
— Entertainment Weekly
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WW Norton)
Booklist Reviews
This tome by award-winning author Lipsky takes the reader on a journey through the evolution of climate-change denial—including how cancer-denial strategies and lobbying by tobacco companies paved the way for its brand of scientific obfuscation—and how it has prevented legislative action. Lipsky covers the science of climate change itself, starting with the discovery of the greenhouse effect in 1824. In 1956, scientist Roger Revelle wrote a piece for Time magazine that confirmed that burning fossil fuel increases carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the results over time cause climate change. Sadly, even in 1965, the Washington Post postulated why no action on climate change would occur when it stated that it is not owing to lack of knowledge but inability to turn knowledge into effective public action." The major deniers would ultimately fall by the wayside, but the lack of response persists. With the amount of research that went into this book, this can be considered the historical record to date on climate action and inaction. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
A National Magazine Award—winning, New York Times best-selling author, Lipsky explains how antiscience sentiment became so strong in the United States by focusing on climate change denial. He lays bare the science of climate change, understood decades ago, then shows how fake news about products like aspirin created the tools for denier ideas to take hold.
Copyright 2022 Library Journal.