This is an incredible read. It amazed me, taught me so much, and scared the crap out of me. Mitchell outlines her expedition across the world's oceans in order to find out what is really going on. She paints the portrait of the ocean as one single entity that is ill, and she takes a brief but thorough and engaging look at each vital sign of the ocean: Oxygen levels, pH, metabolism and fecundity, as well as the Life Force of the ocean and how overfishing has affected the body as a whole. The lessons are harsh, and the future looks quite difficult.
I am reading this book at the right time. Currently, members of Congress and Republican Presidential Candidates in the United States are attacking the Environmental Protection Agency. They claim it is a bureaucratic, job-killing superpower that has been forever stamping on the constitutional rights of our wonderful and smart citizens. Any citizen who would believe that garbage deserves to be represented by garbage. It was depressing for me to read Chapter 8 about China. Although they are currently rapidly become one of the worst offenders, they also appear to be pushing toward a more conscientious age, priding themselves on how green technologies are being considered in industry. The United States, however, is being pushed further backwards to the dark ages. Politicians and citizens are hushing up the scientists who are being revered elsewhere in the world. Intellectual is a bad word. Science is a false prophet meant to dethrone Jesus. The apocalypse is coming, so we should all just look to the sky and pray for streets of gold. This is foolishness. And we are electing these foolish people to office. Where are the physicists, biologists and astro-biologists in politics? Have we become allergic to wisdom? I must say, I have a difficult time drumming up the hope that Mitchell pulls out of the magic hat in the final chapter. The United States just isn't with it, and I feel sorry for us.
I didn't mean to turn a review into a political rant, but I can't help it. Her book makes me happy that there are still good people out there, scientists and scholars who are really getting to the root of the issues and finding out everything we need to know. This book is insightful and well-done, and I think everyone should read it, especially young people. The science is not too difficult for those with a basic knowledge of scientific principles to grasp, but I do believe the basic foundation is essential in this case.