Wired Magazine doesn't review books in depth that often, so I was surprised that they were the first (that I've seen) to review Thomas Friedman's upcoming book, Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--And How It Can Renew America.
It is reviewed by Garret M. Graff, author of The First Campaign: Globalization, the Web, and the Race for the White House.
Wired Magazine doesn't review books in depth that often, so I was surprised that they were the first (that I've seen) to
review Thomas Friedman's upcoming book,
Hot, Flat and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution--And How It Can Renew America.
It is reviewed by Garret M. Graff, author of
The First Campaign: Globalization, the Web, and the Race for the White House. The most interesting piece of the review is the story he relates from the book:
Friedman tells the story of a Marine Corps general in Iraq who requested solar panels to power his bases. Asked why, he explained that he wanted to win his region by "out-greening al Qaeda." Instead of trucking in gas from Kuwait at $20 a gallon--money that fuels oppressive petro-dictatorships--in convoys that are vulnerable to roadside bombs, why not beat the insurgents by taking away their targets and their funding?
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Also
reviewed in this issue, and given four whole pages to Friedman's one, is Neal Stephenson's
Anathem.
Anathem is not a business book--it's a 960 page powerhouse of science-fiction. If you love good science-fiction, however--or just really good writing--our
sister company's book buyer tells me it gets no better than Stephenson. It will be the next non-business book I read.
If you missed the links above, links to the reviews are below.
Hot, Flat and Crowded
Anathem