Not that we haven't been informed--that's the message from an incredible year of new books on climate destabilization, dirty energy policies, bogus Big Coal campaigns and a vibrant anti-coal movement, a growing coalfield resistance and the tragedy of mountaintop removal, and the still big possibility of renewable energy sources to refresh our survival chances on the planet.
Here are some of my favorites from 2009--the list is by no means definitive, and I apologize to the all the great authors I have overlooked (Adam Siegel also has a great list.)
Storms of My Grandchildren: The Truth About the Coming Climate Catastrophe
and Our Last Chance to Save Humanity, by James Hansen.
The world's great sage and fearless climatologist, James Hansen has played a heroic role in explaining the complexities of global warming to the US Congress, world leaders, and the American public over the past three decades. In his first book, Hansen issues a stunning clarion call for action that should be required reading by all American citizens.
Democracy of Ghosts by John Griswold
A brilliant and lyrical historical novel, Democracy of Ghost conjures the affairs behind one of the most violent labor disputes in American history--the brutal killing of 21 scabs and coal miners at a strip mine in southern Illinois in 1921. In some ways a horrifying cautionary tale for today's mining conflicts in the coalfields, Democracy of Ghosts explores the entangled love affairs between couples caught up in the great coal mining strike that ultimately shattered a region, and turned one of the most radical communities into a social pariah. Griswold's narrative is riveting. This original novel deserves as large an audience as possible--pass the word.

Climate Hope: On the Frontlines of the Fight Against Coal
, by Ted Nace
One of the amazing brains and strategists behind the anti-coal movement, CoalSwarm director Ted Nace has written a powerful chronicle of the grassroots movements to stop the construction of coal-fired plants, and halt mountaintop removal operations in Appalachia. CoalSwarm is one of the great engines of information; Nace's book is a stunning tribute to the citizen movements afoot that will ultimately push our country to a coal free future.
Power Trip by Amanda Little
As the beloved and trusted Grist correspondent on energy issues, Little has embarked on a journey to the center of the fossil fuel world. Her book is an indispensable look into the historical roots of coal and oil, and the emergence of the clean energy future. Here's her trailer:
Plundering Appalachia: The Tragedy of Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining
This book is mind-blowing. If any book can change the most cold-hearted Big Coal view about the nightmare of mountaintop removal, Plundering Appalachia and its take-no-prisoners giant photos and essays would be the best shot. Produced by the Foundation for Deep Ecology, Plundering Appalachia includes a series of informative and heartfelt essays by coalfield residents and experts on this human rights and environmental disaster.

Coal Country: Rising Up Against Mountaintop Removal
The book companion to the provocative new film documentary, Coal Country, this anthology stands as one of the most eloquent and effective collections against the practice of mountaintop removal mining in Appalachia. Published by the Sierra Club, and edited by long-time activists and writers Shirley Stewart Burns, Mari-Lynn Evans, and Silas House, this far-reaching book will remain a powerful indictment against one of our nation's most egregious dirty energy policies.
Something's' Rising and We All Live Downstream
While half of the destruction of mountaintop removal has taken place in Kentucky, its horrific reality is often overlooked by the media. These two brilliant collections present the views and stories of Kentuckians on the frontlines, along with some of the best writers on the subject. Edited by Kentucky writers and activists Silas House and Jason Howard, these books are inspiring reminders of the resiliency and resistance of Appalachians in the face of brutal outside coal companies.
Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse by David Orr
One of the great scholars in the climate change and clean energy debate, Orr's new book sets out a challenging and hopeful agenda for real change in how we reshape our nation, our energy policies, and ultimately our personal lives, for the long haul battle against climate destabilization.
Tree Spiker by Mike Roselle
Truly an American original, and a stranger to fear, Mike Roselle has been a powerful force of nature for decades, and his founding activism behind Earth Firth, the Rainforest Action Network, and untold campaigns to save the wilderness in the West--and now, his role in inspiring the civil disobedience campaigns to halt mountaintop removal in Appalachia--are the stuff of legends. This funny and illuminating book is Roselle's testament to a good life on the frontlines of change.
Coal Mountain Elementary by Mark Nowak
Working class hero and poet Nowak gives a lyrical account of the voices of coal mining tragedies in Sago, West Virginia and China, in this breakthrough collection of poetry.

Clean Energy Common Sense: An American Call to Action on Global Climate Change by Frances Beinecke
NRDC President Frances Beinecke has just released a call to action, in the tradition of Tom Paine's Common Sense.
And, of course, two other amazing books I have recently reviewed:
Climate Cover-Up by James Hoggan

and
What's the Worst That Could Happen, by Greg Craven.
Please list your favorite clean energy and climate change books below!
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Thank you, Jeff!
This is a fantastic list. Please let us know whenever you're blogging something this informative so we can consider featuring it on the homepage. I have to admit I've never seen a list quite like this.
We should start a "list of lists" on Red Room so readers can browse through this list for years to come. I'll see what I can do. Thanks for reminding us, subtly, that our choices of what to read next have a political impact on our world.
Ivory Madison
Founder and CEO, Red Room
Mostly climate change books
I offer a list of books for non-scientists that aren’t newly published but will give readers a strong foundation of understanding about the complexities and repercussions of the problem which we are facing. And readers were learn that all scientists aren’t as dry and boring as we have been led to believe!
HIGH TIDE - The Truth About Our Climate Crisis by Mark Lynas &
SIX DEGREES - Our Future on a Hotter Planet by Mark Lynas High Tide was published in 2004 but is still very important for laypeople who don’t know what to think of the strange arguments on media air waves for these past, almost forty years in the United States. I found the best two pages to be the first two pages. Mark has on the left side a photo his father took in 1980 of a glacier in the Peruvian Andes, at the top of Jacabamba valley. On the right side a photo of the same spot in 2002 but no glacier due to changes in climate. This juxtaposition of photos does more than any lecture to make the point that weather is changing dramatically. His newer volume, Six Degrees, the updated version arriving on shelves in 2008, has an interesting and now it turns out to be particularly useful analysis of global warming. Mark sifted through thousands of scientific papers and organized the data based on predictions from temperature rise. So the first chapter is titled One Degree and so on to Six Degrees. Unfortunately analysis of recent data may indicate that a six degree rise in global atmospheric temperature may not be so farfetched.
GREENHOUSE - The 200 Year Story of Global Warming by Gale E. Christianson. I found this to be a successfully interesting history of the science of global warming starting with Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fourier. In 1824 he published an article titled “General Remarks on the Temperature of the Terrestrial Globe and Planetary Spaces.” Each of the books chapters starts with a theme which unexpectedly leads us to a better understanding of the development of research as well as the bricks and mortar of the Industrial Revolution. The book ends with a discussion of the Kyoto Climate treaty and the personalities involved.
WASTE AND WANT - A Social History of Trash by Susan Strasser This is one of my favorite books and helps us understand the intimate details of our ability to create waste.
THE ICE CHRONICLES The Quest to Understand Climate Change by Paul Andrew Mayewski and Frank White forward by Lynn Margulis. Ice cores give us a perfect record of atmospheric concentration through the history of the earth. A true life adventure in the pursuit of science.
CHAOS Making A New Science by James Gleick Have you ever wondered outloud, “Why can’t those meteorologists on the evening news even predict the weather?” I would offer the reason being because our atmospheric systems are chaotic and difficult to predict. The more variables added into the atmosphere, the more difficult to predict. This has been one of my favorite books but not for those with a light hearted attitude towards physics. Yet it is good for the non-scientists to read the beginning, the end and take a look at the photographs to answer some general questions about why the formulation of the chaos theory is important to tracking and predicting the global warming phenomena. I hesitate to offer this last book but will suggest it to those who haven’t thought about the importance of soil in the survival of the human species.
DIRT – The Erosion of Civilizations by David R. Montgomery. Over and over civilizations have fallen – due to the erosion of the soils needed to grow food to support large numbers of people. The time is now to learn the lessons from these fallen civilizations and it will mean rejecting the agribusiness/corporate paradigm for farming. The most disturbing thing about this book is the ability of the author to never once mention the nation of Palestine.