Jenny student
English 110
Professor Eric
February 19 , 2020
- The uninhabitable earth ” life after warming “
The uninhabitable earth is a incredible book written by David Wallace , describing how hurricanes touch the atlantic and multiples rainfalls. This book is a summary of all the natural disasters touching the surface earth for decades .
- According to Wallace Wells California governor Jerry Brown described the state of things in the midst of the state ‘s wildfire disaster ” a new normal ” (18 ) . When we analyse these situations like the temperature getting warmer , we see that tropical storms become more frequent , the heat waves have caused tens of thousands of death around the world , especially California where the forest become more drier each day and caught on fire , with less water the temperature become overheated . As the temperature rise , wildfires season is getting longer and warming oceans . The sea rise higher and faster . when we examine such situations we arrive at the conclusion to say climate change . David Wallace said ” it tempting to look at these strings of disasters and think climate change is here “(18) . And I think personally we leaving in that moment now , the evidence of climate change is all around us and by my understanding this situation is not a new normal .
- Wallace writing ” even if miraculously humans immediately ceases emitting carbon we still be due for some additional warming from just the stuff we’ve put into the air already ” (19) am not agree with that sentence cause it’s never too late to act every little step we make can contribute as changing the situation .In our home by example we can start using less energy , and recycle , while saving more money , planting tree it’s fun , but can also contribute too save the ecosystem . With all those little action we can one day win the planet back .




Great, Jenny. Though no need to format the header in MLA format for a blog post. That’s only for the essays. Do include in-text citations when you quote or paraphrase, however–as you did.