Books : World Made by Hand: A Novel

Books : World Made by Hand: A Novel

Click here for your favorite eBay items
could not open XML input

World Made by Hand: A Novel

by: James Howard Kunstler



World Made by Hand: A Novel
Buy Now
Click Larger Image
Item Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Old Price: $24.00
Your Price: $16.32
You Save!: $7.68 (32%)
Prices subject to change.

Average Buyer Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 2102






Click here for more


Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780871139788
ISBN: 0871139782
Label: Atlantic Monthly Press
Product Manufacturer: Atlantic Monthly Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 336
Publication Date: February 11, 2008
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press
Ranking: 2102
Studio: Atlantic Monthly Press


Click here for more






Novel A Hand: by Made World






0ur opinion:

Item Description:
ln the best-seller The Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler explored how the terminal decline of oil production had the potential to put industrial civilization out of business. With World Made By Hand Kunstler makes an imaginative leap into the future, a few decades hence, and shows us what life may be like after these coming catastrophes—the end of oil, climate change, global pandemics, and resource wars—converge. For the townspeople of Union Grove, New York, the future is not what they thought it would be.  Transportation is slow and dangerous, so food is grown locally at great expense of time and energy. And the outside world is largely unknown. There may be a president and he may be in Minneapolis now, but people aren’t sure. As the heat of summer intensifies, the residents struggle with the new way of life in a world of abandoned highways and empty houses, horses working the fields and rivers replenished with fish. A captivating, utterly realistic novel, World Made by Hand takes speculative fiction beyond the apocalypse and shows what happens when life gets extremely local.



Click here for more






Item Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


More related rroducts we found for you:
The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News Wiser Living Series) Reinventing Collapse: The Soviet Example and American Prospects When All Hell Breaks Loose Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of Declines (New Society Publishers) click for more

More related rroducts we found for you:




Testimonials
Average Buyer Rating:  out of 5 stars

Buyer Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - * Nope. lt is N0T a realistic depiction, nor is it a good read! ...
To mix metaphors - l had great expectations and instead found a shipwreck on the island of apathy.

First, l will give credit where due - the protagonist is well described and l can empathize with his feelings, depression and apathy. That's basically it for the positive.

lt's as if Kunstler did a minimal bit of research and then zero critical thinking on how a society would revert to a more primitive form of social organization once the technological foundation of that modern society was completely removed.

The entire premise of the story revolves around apathy - personal and societal. l find that not only abhorrent, but also unrealistic. lf - or maybe it's when - our technology and oil based society fails because of lack of cheap oil and its benefits - travel - long and short distance, cheap heat, chemicals, electrical generation etc., we will find alternatives - whether it's coal derivatives, electrical or some other technology that will only be viable when oil is expensive and scarce.

Does this mean that society will keep up its frenetic pace of change and "progress"? Not at all. Especially if one adds into the mix terrorists with nukes and rampant epidemics that destabilize world society and kill hundreds of millions, if not billions. Society will most likely have to revert to an earlier era where technology is much simpler and supportable for those needs that are "Made by Hand". But that does not mean that some semblance of `modern' technology won't remain and be maintained as viable - steam trains is but one example.

Another example - Kunstler has most (an implied ~99%) of the cars recycled for their steel. 0k, not a bad idea if there isn't any gasoline from foreign oil fields being imported any longer. But... it's fairly simple to convert a gas engine to run on alcohol or even "wood gas" (Google that and you'll be amazed). So there'll be some sort of short range transportation made possible by individuals with an engineering proclivity. Will this sort of thing be wide spread like today's trucks and autos? Not likely nor practical. But it will exist in some form. Why? My answer is human nature. Find the unknown and unworkable and make it work.

Another glaring hole in my opinion is the fact the Kunstler allows the electricity to come on at random intervals and for short random times. lf trains, planes and automobiles are non-functioning and non-existent, then where the heck are the electrical generators in this grand scheme? lf society can't make a wood fired steam train work, how can a complex power grid be maintained? lf apathy is the watchword of the decade, then who the heck is climbing the power poles to connect the power lines? Furthermore, if most of the trucks and autos have been recycled for their metal content, why haven't the power lines been recycled for their copper and aluminum content? l can't willingly suspend my disbelief to cover that large and glaring of a gap.

Guns. Though never specified, it's implied that this story takes place 1O to 15 years after a `crash' where the whole world just stops functioning. Given the number of guns in America in 2OO8, given the rural setting depicted in the story, the near absence and rarity of guns is one more point where it appears that Kunstler has discarded critical thinking. Even though the population has been devastated by virulent disease, gun violence seems out of the norm and relatively rare. Rare enough to shock the protagonist when it appears early in the narrative. l'd posit that regardless of the number of people that succumbed to the uncontrolled diseases, gangs of thugs would have been, or are still, ravaging the country far and wide, scrounging for food, more guns and women to rape. Survivors would have had to deal with these gangs of thugs time and again - or be killed by them. l would suggest that violence would remain distasteful to thinking and feeling humans, but it would not be as shocking as Kunstler has portrayed it.

l could detail a half-dozen other oversights or outright goofs, but suffice to say that this was not an enjoyable post-apocalyptic story. Way too many gaps of logic to be remotely probable. And for my money that's what makes these sorts of tales enjoyable or not. And this one was not either probable or enjoyable.




Buyer Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - World made by hand
lt was a good read. The writer manipulated my assumptions of the characters in a subtle, yet effective way. Also, l enjoyed the detail of description that people in the story went to cope with life with the lack of today's infrastructure. Thought provoking.



Buyer Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Read "The Long Emergency First"
You need to read "The Long Emergency" by Kunstler before you read this book. The former is his projection of the breakdown of the hydrocarbon based society we live in today "World Made By Hand" is a fictionalized account of the society which follows the collapse of that world. The book is believable and adheres to the authors vision of the future. lt's a good work of science fiction and provides some "food for thought" along the way.



Buyer Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - * Dismal and flat ...
Kunstler's fictional account of our future without oil is overly dismal and lacking in heart. While l have been a follower of his theories on suburbia and the built environment, he has gone over the edge of reason in his peak oil theories which demonize technology and cars of all types.
ln his fictitious future not only is there no oil, but no trade or transportation of any type. The skills our ancestors relied on to live civilized lives have disappeared- even bicycles and horses are not readily available. All those with practical skills, such as carpentry, mechanics, farming etc have been mysteriously wiped out by pandemics, leaving inept computer jockeys to scrape and claw out an existence.
The problem with this book is not only that this dismal portrayal is unrealistic, but the characters and plot do not engage us enough to make it through their dismal world with any feeling. As others have pointed out, the female characters exist primarily to have sex with the male characters, and have no other development. The main character has been deadened by all the tragedy he has lived through, which provides a thin excuse for the flatness of his ride through this apocalyptic landscape.




Buyer Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - "And that is the end of the story..."
James Howard Kunstler is best known for nonfiction writing in which he speculates about whether or not "peak oil" has been reached and how an ever-decreasing oil supply might impact society from that point onward. Kunstler's nonfiction paints a gruesome picture of what life will be like when there is no more oil to be had and he places that scenario in the relatively near future. l'm not particularly inclined to agree with what Kunstler has to say in his role of gloom and doom prophet, but l did enjoy World Made by Hand, the novel based upon his predictions of what is to come.

World Made by Hand, and the post-apocalyptic world Kunstler has created within it, can certainly be challenged as to the likelihood that a gradually disappearing oil supply would ever create such a drastic societal change. But if one reads the novel as simply a depiction of one of an infinite number of possible futures for this country, it starts to resemble science fiction and can be a good bit of fun.

The novel is set in Union Grove, New York, a little Adirondack community peopled by survivors of a series of catastrophes that have devastated the United States over the last decade. They have survived a major flu epidemic that seems to have wiped out a huge segment of the population, nuclear explosions in Washington D.C. and Los Angeles, and the complete disappearance of the crude oil supply that made their former lifestyle possible. They have created their own little world, one without contact with anyone much more than thirty miles in any direction, and they have settled into a relatively apathetic new existence of making-do and doing-without.

The Union Grove area is already home to three separate groups when what appears to be a fundamentalist Christian sect searching for a new home suddenly appears in town, buys the old high school, and begins to create a new home for itself there. The townspeople themselves are, for the most part, people who had formerly lived a middle-class, white-collar lifestyle. There is also a self-sustaining group living a serf-like existence on a large paternalistic farm where they give up much of their independence in exchange for better food and a few of the luxuries, like electricity, that have disappeared elsewhere in the area. And there is a lawless group, living in trailers and whatever other shelter they can throw together on the edge of town, that is headed up by a ruthless leader determined to take from those weaker than himself whatever he needs or wants.

When conflict and violence threaten the citizens of Union Grove, distrust of outsiders has to be set aside and new alliances formed if any semblance of an orderly society is to survive there. World Made by Hand is the story of good people forced to adapt in ways they never expected to have to adapt, and not all of the changes pertain to their physical lifestyles. They are also challenged to change their whole concept of right and wrong, their willingness to use whatever force is necessary to protect themselves, and the way that they see their place in this diminished world.

Kunstler has created a post-apocalyptic world that still offers hope to those determined to live a moral life under such changed circumstances. His novel maintains a realistic atmosphere throughout until his unfortunate decision near the very end to give it a touch of the supernatural, a change of tone that largely diminishes the novel that it could have been. Whether or not Kunstler was having difficulty finding an ending for his book or not is only something he can answer, but his decision to end it the way he did, with a Cormac-McCarthy-meets-Stephen-King ending, was so jarring to me that l rated the novel a full point lower than l otherwise would have. That said, this one was still a good bit of fun.

read more customer reviews on World Made by Hand: A Novel


We have more similar products, listed by their category for you:
RARE 1890 FIFTH BOOK CONTINENTAL READERS MUTUAL BOOK COonly $ 3.00Bid Now!3d 6h 2m left!


 


'Recreational Cooking Classes Online', | Chef Shoes - Chef Employment | Atkins Products - Atkins Diet Free Plan





Cut your energy bills with these simple steps.

30-year Fixed Mortgage rates remain unchanged in the United States Wednesday

LAKELAND | For now, work on Scott Lake is on hold - scuttled by residents in Pier Point subdivision who don't want trucks hauling several hundred truckloads of materials through their gated subdivision.

REHOBOTH BEACH, Del. -- The "no vacancy" signs outside hotels, sunburned families packing boardwalk amusement rides and thousands of students working in surf shops and souvenir concessions along the avenues suggest that the beach economy is booming this summer.

Personal finance expert Jean Chatzky explains why it's so important to build an emergency fund, as well as how to do it.

Open House takes a look at cities likely to recover first from the real-estate slowdown, a luxury boom in North Texas and Phoenix neighborhoods with high foreclosure rates.







by Fil Hunter, Steven Biver, Paul Fuqua
$32.23

Average customer rating: 5.0 ISBN: 0240808193

by Lee Varis
$23.99

Average customer rating: 4.5 ISBN: 047004733X

by Gary Gordon
$63.06

Average customer rating: 4.0 ISBN: 047144118X
$11.98



On their debut album, 1999's Something About Airplanes, Death Cab for Cutie proved there's a reason why Northwest music critics continue to sing their praises. The foursome combined the emo sounds of Modest Mouse and 764-Hero with an inventive, and often sly, sentimentality. It worked wonders, but still sounded a little too lo-fi. Luckily, on We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes the group has figured out all the production nuances that flawed that auspicious debut. The opening "Title Track" begins by sounding both crappy and shallow, but the band is merely pulling your leg; two minutes later, the tune expands into a gorgeous, well-produced masterpiece. The album never looks back. Ben Gibbard's songwriting continues to evolve--"Company Calls" segues into, what else, the slower "Company Calls Epilogue"--while the simple lyrics of "For What Reason" and "405" tell infectious stories that demand repeated listenings. Proof positive the Northwest is still churning out great music. --Jason Verlinde
$16.98



The first Black Box Recorder album, 1998's England Made Me, was originally conceived by Auteurs and Baader Meinhof frontman Luke Haines as a typically baleful response to the cultural and political hysteria--respectively, Britpop and Tony Blair--then gripping Britain. Recorded with the help of former Jesus & Mary Chain drummer John Moore and singer Sarah Nixey, it did for Britpop roughly what the film Carrie did for the senior prom. The Facts of Life, the follow-up, maintains the withering glare but fixes it this time on the personal. The songs here obsess with unnerving clarity and mordant wit on the banal, cruel details of human relationships and are narrated perfectly by Nixey. Where her perfectly English-accented whisper infused England Made Me with the air of a bored aristocrat finding contemptuous amusement in the misery of others, on The Facts of Life she has located an edge of taunting viciousness all the more diabolical for being so understated. The tunes, as ever, are sweet and insidious, perhaps best thought of as Saint Etienne turned feral. Highlights on an album full of them are "English Motorway" and "The Art of Driving"--BBR triumphantly reclaiming the American rock & roll prerogative of the road song for their damp, claustrophobic homeland. The Facts of Life is a masterpiece. --Andrew Mueller


Novel A Hand: by Made World
Shopping at gourmet-food.greatestgiftstore.com  Created at Sun Oct 12 11:39:16 2008