|
I have recommended it to several friends, and given it as gifts.JW Paul Hawken did everyone a favor in writing this book. It is very comprehensive and insightful, and the picture of the transformation of society it paints in very inspiring and hopeful.
This book was more focused on explaining the problems and not as much as on offering solutions. This book was well written and the author is clearly informed on his subject. The only reason I rated it low was because I was looking for something that gave more information on how to help solve the problems covered in the book.
It gives me hope that the traditionally less-powerful people on this planet are on the brink of achieving goals that are based on integrity and compassion, instead of--as delivered by the industrial revolution's power structure--stupidity and greed. This is an informative and fun read.
The book was in perfect condition. I'm very happy with my recent purchase of Blessed Unrest.
It was very frustrating because the theme has so much potential. It was a hard to follow book and I found myself skimming major parts just because it was too unbearable to read it word by word. This is due to two reasons. I would NOT recommend this book. Hawking brings in a lot of philosophical and scientific references that crowds out discussion of the social movement and organizations. The underlying motivation, premise and theme of this book is fantasti.
After completing it, I can't say that I learned much about the ecological organizations or anything new about how the movements can better succeed. The philosophical and scientific references made were not well integrated into the narrative; overall the writing lacks good transition sentences among paragraphs and chapters. A book on the subtitle "how the largest social movement in history is restoring grace, justice and beauty to the world" is needed. Second, teh writing is very disorganized and choppy. Instead, Fritjof Capra's The Hidden Connections contains a much clearer and productive discussion of the science and philosophy underlying ecological thinking and he applies that to a critique of globalization, consumerism and other issues. Unfortunately, this book does not adequately fulfill this need.
First the content of the book is not squarely focused on what the subtitle suggests.
|