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World Made by Hand: A Novel

World Made by Hand: A Novel
Author: James Howard Kunstler
Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press
Category: Book

List Price: $24.00
Buy New: $13.94
You Save: $10.06 (42%)



New (38) Used (10) from $13.94

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 73 reviews
Sales Rank: 1340

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.7 x 1.3

ISBN: 0871139782
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780871139788
ASIN: 0871139782

Publication Date: February 11, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20080718222140T

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - World Made by Hand: A Novel

Similar Items:

  • The Long Emergency: Surviving the End of Oil, Climate Change, and Other Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century
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  • Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of Declines (New Society Publishers)
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In the best-seller The Long Emergency, James Howard Kunstler explored how the terminal decline of oil production had the potential to put industrial civilization out of business. With World Made By Hand Kunstler makes an imaginative leap into the future, a few decades hence, and shows us what life may be like after these coming catastrophes—the end of oil, climate change, global pandemics, and resource wars—converge. For the townspeople of Union Grove, New York, the future is not what they thought it would be. Transportation is slow and dangerous, so food is grown locally at great expense of time and energy. And the outside world is largely unknown. There may be a president and he may be in Minneapolis now, but people aren’t sure. As the heat of summer intensifies, the residents struggle with the new way of life in a world of abandoned highways and empty houses, horses working the fields and rivers replenished with fish. A captivating, utterly realistic novel, World Made by Hand takes speculative fiction beyond the apocalypse and shows what happens when life gets extremely local.



Customer Reviews:   Read 68 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Read and Share   July 20, 2008
This book is readable, but not great literature; however, it is a starting place for discussion. OK, I hate the metaphysical stuff at the end, it gets in the way of the message about the dangers of living in a peak oil world, excessive greenhouse gas emissions, pandemics, etc.
CNN recently made a 1-hour documentary called "Out of Gas, We Were Warned" that legitimizes the idea that possibly a perfect storm of events could turn our comfy, energy-rich world upside down, as it did in Kunstler's book.

I've read this book a couple of times and lent it out. No one wants to hear this message, but it is worthy of discussion and can provide an opening for bringing up a topic.

I would like to read a sequel, but please leave out the mumbo-jumbo, James.



4 out of 5 stars I truly enjoyed it!   July 9, 2008
I grabbed a few books from the library and headed to the beach over the 4th. Three novels in four days, all with an apocalyptic bent. Maybe it wasn't five stars, but it certainly seemed that way after reading the other two...yikes!
You can read a summary of the plot elsewhere, but the condensed version is that we've taken a giant step back into the 18th century after the collapse of the Oil Age.
Plot twists aside, what I really enjoyed about the book was listening to Kunstlers' gentle writing voice. I was transported to a different, harder, world and I found that I liked it there! The scrabble for survival made me wonder whether I'd be up to the challenge, and I began to appreciate the themes of self-reliance that ran through the story. It reminded me of the slightly mystical feelings I experienced reading Thoreau and Emerson.
Plot wise? Maybe not that great. For me, the book was more about the journey than the destination. Worth a read.



1 out of 5 stars Even reality isn't this bad...   July 6, 2008
The nay-sayers are right, don't bother. He can't write dialogue, he can't do character development and he certainly can't write sex scenes.

And, just like 'The Long Emergency' got weird at the end, predicting 'Asian Pirates' would descend upon the Pacific NW, the end of this book got nothing short of hallucinatorily strange with the 'hive' segment. What the hell?

Buy an old copy of the Whole Earth Catalog, Little House on the Prairie, and read Matt Savinar. You'll pretty much have what you need.



3 out of 5 stars kunstler should stick to blogging & stuff   July 5, 2008
this book... well, sucked. i got it from the library and actually read it all the way through... but not so much because i was intrigued as because i didn't feel it was fair to rag on it without reading it first.

i am a BIG fan of kunstler and i read his blog regularly. i have found his nonfiction books to be truly enlightening (as well as well-written and actually funny) and have passed them along to numerous friends. i have plagued mr. kunstler with fan email. i take all of his predictions and warnings to heart. kunstler is a great writer... of nonfiction.

i tried once before to read one of his novels but couldn't get more than a couple pages in. given the topic of this book i was much more determined. and it's the subject matter that is this novel's only redeemable characteristic. kunstler has made a valiant attempt at fleshing out an image of a post-carbon world, one we're extremely likely to be actually living in, in the near future. i have no doubt about that. nor do i have much doubt about the plausibility of what he describes.

i do have doubts regarding why he bothers writing fiction when he's so bad at it.

other reviewers have noted that his characterizations are shallow... and that his descriptions of women rarely make it past their physical features. my chief complaint is that the dialogue is terrible. it's unrealistic and it's used as a very obvious vehicle for giving the reader information about the world they're visiting. "say, earle - don't you ever miss the old times, back when we used to have electricity & cars & stuff? now things are so hard, and our womenfolk can't hardly bear children... i miss cold beer." i paraphrase... but this is generally how it goes.

besides the crappy dialogue, there's a rather bizarre story arc. the main adventure of the story is over with halfway through, and the rest is just a jumbled mess of nearly pornographic depictions of people at their worst, giving in to their basest natures. except for the main character, who remains an upright citizen and as a reward is able to score a really young, petite li'l bride. nothing is said about how he deals with the woman he was previously banging, who was older but she made a fine jug o' wine.

i'm relieved to be done reading this book - it's due back at the library today and it's not worth paying a fine on. i hope that kunstler returns to what he's best at - nonfiction - and writes more books about our impending doom in the non-fiction way. i'll keep reading his blog.

if you're curious to know what kind of world he's created in this book but don't want to bother reading it, just imagine "little house on the prairie" set in a world where instead of endless prairie there are lots of former strip malls and the older people have almost dream-like memories of living in a world with cars and plasma TVs. that's really all you need to know.



3 out of 5 stars Starts a 5, digresses downward...   July 1, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'm glad I'm not the only one seeking a salve to "The Road" (which was profound, but terrifying - an absolute 5+ star).

While I did liked some of the messages of the book -- it's important to prepare now for a very possible, if not probable change in lifestyle and know how to "do stuff" -- the book overall is just "eh" for me. I wanted to like it...it started off well.

The first chapters were truly interesting. I couldn't put the thing down. I thought the speech patterns were funny in their mix of old fashioned lingo and modern language. He is great at describing minutae. But....he's not so great describing people or developing their persona. After the halfway point, I struggled to move on. There are too many characters that don't have any depth. The women are Stepford. Why would all the women in this community be so defeated? The only one with a bit of spunk is the widow, Britney; but she is awfully underdeveloped as a character. Why was her marriage bad? He stated that, but didn't go any further. I wanted to know. Why would his best friend just turn the other way as his wife had an affair with him? Lots of couples go through "dry spells" and they don't pass their wife off to their best friend for "weekly visits". That didn't develop plot. It was just stupid. Why did the musical group he belonged to play primarily 19th century music? They would've played classical, pop, modern, jazz, bluegrass, etc...they were products of the 21st century, not 1850.

As mentioned in other reviews, the lack of ammunition was a really big pet peeve of mine. I know people who re-load shells. We lived in a rural hunting community in the great frozen northlands for 3 years -- reloading was very common because it was economical. The equipment is all non-electric. And I would have to assume after the manufactured supplies for re-loading were expended, that people would just figure it out...they've been doing it for millenia. Look at black-powder muskets during Colonial times...those supplies were manufactured in the same type of "culture" as is suggested in this story. Plenty of people in rural upstate New York would be hunters familiar with firearms -- someone would have become the town gunsmith. I also think a barber would have set up shop before the New Faithers arrived. People in Colonial America liked to look good, too, you know. Every western (movie) has a barbershop -- and the wild wild west was a lot wilder than this town. America is very integrated racially, even in small town America. Where were the minorities?

I don't think they would have had to rely on "the general" as much as they did. I think they would have started making almost everything they needed. And if people didn't know how to "do stuff" I can't believe all of the books simply vanished; they would read HOW to do something. Right here in my home, I have books on horticulture, quilting, breakmaking, etc. Go to any craft fair, and you can find many different kinds of handmade soap, candles, jams, dried herbs, for example. Even crafts and hobbies considered frivolous today would prove useful. People just know how to do stuff. Interesting stuff, like weaving clothing, knitting, carpentry, gardening, writing, etc. I make all of my own bread, and know how to make yogurt and fresh cheese; I know how to make a reed basket without any hardware; I have lots of friends who can and preserve produce, dry meats and produce, etc. And we're not even close to being "survivalists!" There is a whole religion (ahem, residing primarily in Utah) that strongly recommends that their members have food on hand for x number of people for x number of months/years -- I have friends involved with this said religion, and they are *ready* for such a future. I just don't think quite as many people would be in the dire straights that the author suggests. *However, I do agree that the people that would be most unprepared and ill-equipped would be residing in large cities, as he suggests. Rural communities would fare much better.

I guess I'm done with my rambling 12:35 am review.


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