Silent Spring Book Review
Rachel Louise Carson (1907-64), was an American marine biologist, and author of widely read books on ecological themes. Carson was born in Springdale, Pennsylvania, and educated at the former Pennsylvania College for Women and Johns Hopkins University. Rachel Carson taught Zoology at the University of Maryland from 1931 to 1936. She was an aquatic biologist at the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries and its successor, the Fish and Wildlife Service, from 1936 to 1952. Rachel Carson wrote 4 books including The Sea Around Us for which she was awarded the 1952 National Book Award for nonfiction. At the end of Rachel Carson's career she wrote Silent Spring, which questioned the use of Chemical Pesticides and was responsible for arousing world wide concern for the preservation of the environment. Silent Spring takes a hard look at the effects of the insecticides, weed killers and other common products as well as the use of sprays in agriculture. By introducing these deadly substances, we have poisoned or lakes and streams, or wild and domestic animals, and even ourselves. The book focuses on the importance of balance within the environment. Rachel Carson wrote..."Where spraying destroys not only the insects but also their principle
There are two issues in which i do not feel have been addressed properly. This book was released in the early 60's and just recently have we been seeing changes with law and business practice. I would highly recommend it to anyone with some college education. It failed to show the good it had done and the lives that it had actually saved. However, the book does get a little dull here and there. The over use of DDT, dieldrin and other pesticides eventually poisoned an entire world of living things. By avoiding both sides of the story she subjected herself to much criticism. Carson helps to change this way of thinking by offering solutions to the existing problems. Suddenly we are not just a species we are a planet. Silent Spring not only recognizes the severity of the chemicals usage but recognizes the effect of substance use on a community. Many critics say that in many ways Silent Spring has caused more death than it has prevented. The critics of Carson are looking to this book, as an answer to all environmental questions instead of looking to it as a guide. It helped people to look at the whole picture, to look into the future instead of the now. Why this book is so recognized has nothing to do with the actual data, it has to do with awareness and the beginning of global consciousness.
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