Bestselling, magisterial melding of global environmental history and global political history
Mike Davis is the author of many books including Planet of Slums, City of Quartz, Ecology of Fear, Late Victorian Holocausts, and Magical Urbanism. He was recently awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.
Davis has given us a book of substantial contemporary relevance as
well as great historical interest...this highly informative book
foes well beyond its immediate focus.
*The New York Times*
Davis's range is stunning...He combines political economy,
meteorology, and ecology with vivid narratives to create a book
that is both a gripping read and a major conceptual achievement.
Lots of us talk about writing 'world history' and
'interdisciplinary history': here is the genuine article.
*Kenneth Pomeranz, author of The Great Divergence*
The global climate meets a globalizing political economy, the
fundamentals of one clashing with the fundamentalisms of the other.
Mike Davis tells the story with zest, anger, and insight.
*Stephen J. Pyne, author of World Fire*
Davis, a brilliant maverick scholar, sets the triumph of the
late-nineteenth-century Western imperialism in the context of
catastrophic El Niño weather patterns at that time ... This is
groundbreaking, mind-stretching stuff.
*Independent*
Late Victorian Holocausts will redefine the way we think about the
European colonial project. After reading this, I defy even the most
ardent nationalist to feel proud of the so-called 'achievements' of
empire.
*Observer*
Devastating.
*San Francisco Chronicle*
Eloquent and passionate, this is a veritable Black Book of liberal
capitalism.
*Tariq Ali*
Generations of historians largely ignored the implications [of the
great famines of the late nineteenth century] and until recently
dismissed them as 'climatic accidents'...Late Victorian Holocausts
proves them wrong.
*Los Angeles Times (Best Books of 2001)*
Wide ranging and compelling...a remarkable achievement.
*Times Literary Supplement*
A masterly account of climatic, economic and colonial history.
*New Scientist*
A hero of the Left, Davis is part polemicist, part historian, and
all Marxist.
*Village Voice*
The catalogue of cruelty Davis has unearthed is jaw-dropping . Late
Victorian Holocausts is as ugly as it is compelling.
*Guardian*
Controversial, comprehensive, and compelling, this book is
megahistory at its most fascinating-a monument to times past, but
hopefully not a predictor of future disasters.
*Foreign Affairs*
Devastating.
*San Francisco Chronicle*
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