Like Winchester's Krakatoa, The Year Without Summer reveals a year of dramatic global change long forgotten by history
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In the tradition of Krakatoa, The World Without Us, and Guns, Germs and Steel comes a sweeping history of the year that became known as 18-hundred-and-froze-to-death. 1816 was a remarkable year―mostly for the fact that there was no summer. As a result of a volcanic eruption in Indonesia, weather patterns were disrupted worldwide for months, allowing for excessive rain, frost, and snowfall through much of the Northeastern U.S. and Europe in the summer of 1816.
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In the U.S., the extraordinary weather produced food shortages, religious revivals, and extensive migration from New England to the Midwest. In Europe, the cold and wet summer led to famine, food riots, the transformation of stable communities into wandering beggars, and one of the worst typhus epidemics in history. 1816 was the year Frankenstein was written. It was also the year Turner painted his fiery sunsets. All of these things are linked to global climate change―something we are quite aware of now, but that was utterly mysterious to people in the nineteenth century, who concocted all sorts of reasons for such an ungenial season.
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Making use of a wealth of source material and employing a compelling narrative approach featuring peasants and royalty, politicians, writers, and scientists, The Year Without Summer by William K. Klingaman and Nicholas P. Klingaman examines not only the climate change engendered by this event, but also its effects on politics, the economy, the arts, and social structures.
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【From Booklist】
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In April 1815, two giant eruptions from Tamboro, a supposedly latent volcano east of Java, pumped millions of tons of ash and sulfuric acid into the atmosphere. The immediate results were catastrophic, as the blast, lava, poisonous gases, and a tsunami destroyed entire villages. But the long-term effects, felt the following year, were more far-reaching and devastating. The massive expulsion of gas and dust formed clouds that circled the globe, deflected sunlight, and resulted in a significant lowering of temperatures, especially in the northern hemisphere. This cooling caused crop failures, famine, and social turmoil. The Klingamans lay out the scientific details of the disaster in a lucid, easily digestible manner. They also effectively integrate the natural calamities into a narrative that includes the political and social milieu of Europe and North America. This is an engrossing work that illustrates the fragility of societies when confronted with sudden and severe disruption of weather patterns.
--Jay Freeman
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【Review】
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“Many people in North America and Europe believed that the freezing summer of 1816 foretold the end of the world. Unaware that the invisible ash cloud that spread round the world from a volcanic eruption in Indonesia caused the aberrant weather, they thought the sun was dying. William Klingaman vividly portrays the myths and realities of that terrifying season.”
―James M. McPherson, Pulitzer-Prize-winning and New York Times bestselling author of Battle Cry of Freedom, Crossroads of Freedom, Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution, and For Cause and Comrades
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“When a volcanic eruption on a Pacific island swathed the earth with droplets, producing freakish weather that ruined harvests all over the world, how did people react? William and Nicholas Klingaman tell us how the year without summer affected an astonishing variety of people on different continents, including rulers and peasants, working families, Jane Austen and Mary Shelley. A book like nothing you've read before.”
―Daniel Walker Howe, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation Of America
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“William K. Klingaman's groundbreaking work will forever alter the way we view the years immediately following the War of 1812. Beautifully written in prose that will excite both expert and layman, it tells the remarkable story-in superb detail-of how in April 1815 the severest volcanic eruption in 2000 years on Mount Tambora disrupted the earth's weather profoundly, and with it, the politics, economics, arts, and religious beliefs of an era. In every respect this is a marvelous book, impossible to put down.”
―George C. Daughan author of 1812: The Navy's War
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“Klingaman's vibrant narrative carries us from Indonesia to Ohio as it traces the global effects of the Mt. Tambora eruption. The Year Without Summer is as dexterous at explaining the science of climatology as it is at describing how the endless rain in Geneva figured into Byron's poetry or how New Englanders saw God's wrath in the summer snowstorms that froze their fields.”
―Steven Biel, author of Down with the Old Canoe: A Cultural History of the Titanic Disaster
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“Massive volcanic cataclysm, ash and global cold, failed harvests, social unrest, and Frankenstein to boot: Klingaman paints an intriguing, multilayered picture of the year when global climate went mad and a lot of people went hungry. The Year Without Summer is a sobering reminder of humanity's vulnerability to natural disasters--in a world with far fewer inhabitants than today.”
―Brian Fagan, author of Beyond the Blue Horizon, The Great Warming and Elixir: A History of Water and Humankind
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“Intrigued by the weather? You will be after reading The Year Without Summer. Writing with verve and flair, author William Klingaman shows how in 1816 an event in the Far East dramatically influenced weather patterns in Europe and the United States, causing summer blizzards, flooding, and deadly famines. This is a disquieting, but important, story that throws light on global weather patterns and our precarious hold on life.”
―John Ferling author of Independence, Almost a Miracle, and Setting the World Ablaze
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“The Year Without Summer puts Krakatoa in the shade. This is an erudite, vivid, and fast-paced narrative of the extraordinary consequences of the largest and deadliest known volcanic eruption in history. Linking the stories of a cast of royal, political and literary characters - Louis XVIII, Madison, Napoleon and Byron among them - as well as laborers, seafarers and rabble-rousers, William and Nicholas Klingaman help us visualize and understand how a remote Indonesian volcano helped to foment social, economic and political turmoil on both sides of the Atlantic.”
―Clive Oppenheimer, author of Eruptions That Shook the World and Volcanoes
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“A thought-provoking account describing the far-reaching and long-lasting effects on Europe and America of a single volcanic eruption in the tropics. Tambora's 1815 outburst caused changes in weather patterns with negative impact on agriculture, resulting in famine and disease. Riots and political discord followed and worsened the socio-economic consequences of the Napoleonic wars in Europe. Such an aftermath provides a warning for what our living earth may have in store for the future.”
―Dr. Jelle Zeilinga de Boer, author of Volcanoes in Human History and Earthquakes in Human History
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“The Year Without Summer shows how a volcanic eruption in Indonesia transformed life in the United States and Europe. William and Nicholas Klingaman have placed 1816 on the list of pivotal years in history and have provided a compelling account of the mushrooming effects of a natural disaster. This is environmental and world history at its finest.”
―Louis P. Masur, author of The Civil War, 1831, and The Soiling of Old Glory
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“A great book about one of the least known and most devastating natural disasters in history.”
―Theodore Steinberg, author of Acts of God and Down to Earth
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“The Klingamans lay out the scientific details of the disaster in a lucid, easily digestible manner. They also effectively integrate the natural calamities into a narrative that includes the political and social milieu of Europe and North America. This is an engrossing work that illustrates the fragility of societies when confronted with sudden and severe disruption of weather patterns.”
―Booklist
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“An intriguing sidelight on the effects of climate change.”
―Kirkus Reviews
WILLIAM K. KLINGAMAN holds a Ph.D. in American History from the University of Virginia and has taught at the University of Virginia and the University of Maryland. He is the author of six previous books, including histories of the years 1918, 1929, and 1941.
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NICHOLAS P. KLINGAMAN holds a Ph.D. in Meteorology from the University of Reading, where he is now a research scientist. His work focuses on investigating the effects of climate change on tropical weather patterns.
这本书讲的是1815年印度尼西亚坦博拉火山大爆发,火山灰进入大气层,引起了次年全球气温降低、粮食减产、欧美主要国家饥荒、政局不稳的故事。加拿大和美国东部、南部几乎全年暴雪、暴雨、干旱成灾,农业歉收,致使大批人口饿死、迁移到西部和南部去,这一年麦迪逊总统执政最后...
评分我曾到一个似梦非梦的幻境, 那里,明媚的阳光已经熄灭, 浩瀚的星辰迷失在黑暗宇宙的永恒虚空之中, 无径冰封的大地长夜难明; 唯有婆娑的星球不知所以地在转动, 在无月的空中笼罩着幽灵。 黎明来了又去——白昼却不再降临, 面对绝望的恐惧,人们选择去遗忘激情; 一颗颗冷...
评分 评分 评分有一个好朋友,毕业后一直在做编辑。 我问,为啥想去做编辑啊? 她说,小时候,不管是学校发的新书,还是书店只看不买的书,都觉得书刚打开那几页出现的那些名字,一定是很了不起的人物吧! 我问,那现在你觉得呢? 她说,谁还没有个年轻脑残的时候。 协助前辈做《无夏之年》的...
不得不说,这本书带给我的冲击是巨大的,它让我对“时间”这个概念有了全新的理解。作者通过“没有夏天”的设定,巧妙地模糊了时间的界限,让过去、现在和未来交织在一起,形成了一个独特而引人入胜的故事。我特别喜欢书中对于社会结构和人际关系在极端环境下的演变过程的描绘。当赖以生存的资源变得稀缺,当生存的压力日益增大,人性的善与恶,自私与无私,都在被放大和考验。我看到了那些为了争夺生存空间而爆发的冲突,也看到了那些在危难中互相扶持、建立起来的深厚情谊。作者对这些社会现象的分析鞭辟入里,让我对人类社会的运作机制有了更深刻的认识。书中的主人公,他不仅仅是在记录一个异常的年份,更是在探究人类文明的本质,在寻找在极端环境下,文明得以延续的关键。我被他对那些历史文献和科学记录的研究所吸引,他试图从过去的经验中寻找解决眼前困境的线索,这种对知识和智慧的尊重,让我肃然起敬。这本书不仅仅是一部关于灾难的小说,它更是一部关于文明传承和人性探索的史诗,它让我开始思考,在面对不可抗拒的力量时,我们应该如何选择,我们应该如何守护我们所珍视的一切。
评分这本书简直是把我带到了一个全新的世界,作者的想象力简直是天马行空,但又在逻辑上合情合理,让人不得不佩服。故事的核心概念——一个没有夏天的年份——本身就充满了吸引力,它挑战了我对自然规律的固有认知,让我开始思考,如果世界的秩序发生颠倒,我们的生活会变成什么样?我特别喜欢作者对人物塑造的细致入微,每个角色都有自己的挣扎、渴望和秘密,他们都不是完美的,但正因如此,他们的经历才更加真实、更能引起我的共鸣。比如那个一直试图在严寒中寻找一丝温暖的年轻学者,他的执着和不屈让我深受感动,仿佛能感受到他指尖冰冷的触感,听到他在风雪中发出的低语。还有那个为了保护家人而不得不做出艰难选择的母亲,她的痛苦和力量交织在一起,让我对人性的复杂有了更深的理解。这本书不仅仅是关于一个异常的年份,它更是关于人类在极端环境下的生存智慧、情感羁绊以及面对未知时的勇气。作者在描绘那些因为缺少阳光而产生的压抑、恐慌以及随之而来的社会动荡时,笔触是如此细腻,让我仿佛身临其境,感受到了那种无处不在的寒意和绝望。然而,即使在最黑暗的时刻,书中也总有那么一丝希望的光芒闪耀,可能是来自人与人之间微小的善意,也可能是对重拾温暖的坚定信念。读这本书的过程,就像是在经历一场心灵的洗礼,它让我重新审视了生命中那些被我们忽略的美好,那些曾经以为理所当然的温暖。我尤其欣赏作者的叙事节奏,张弛有度,总能在最恰当的时候抛出新的悬念,让我欲罢不能,恨不得一口气读完,但又舍不得就此告别那些生动的人物和那个奇特的年份。
评分我必须说,这本书的开篇就深深地抓住了我,那种突如其来的异常,一种世界的失序感,让人脊背发凉。作者巧妙地利用了“没有夏天”这个概念,来探讨一系列更深层次的主题,比如对自然的反思,对人类脆弱性的揭示,以及在逆境中迸发的生命力。故事中的人物,他们不是生活在镁光灯下的英雄,而是我们身边可能出现的普通人,但正是他们的平凡,在极端条件下所展现出的非凡,才显得尤为动人。我特别被那个在食物匮乏的情况下,仍然坚持分享自己微薄食物的年轻人所打动,他的行为不仅仅是一种生存策略,更是一种道德的坚守,是对人性光辉的最好诠释。作者对环境的描写也极其出色,那种永恒的寒冷,那种阴沉的天空,那种植被的凋零,都被描绘得淋漓尽致,仿佛真的能感受到空气中的湿冷和绝望。但是,在这样的绝境中,作者也展现了人类与自然斗争的顽强,以及那些隐藏在严寒中的温暖。我喜欢他们如何利用残存的资源,如何互相扶持,如何在绝望中寻找希望。这本书让我深刻地意识到,我们对于“正常”的定义是多么脆弱,一旦赖以生存的自然规律发生改变,我们将面临怎样的挑战。它也让我更加珍惜我们现在所拥有的,那些曾经被我们视为理所当然的阳光、温暖和四季的更替。这本书不仅是一部引人入胜的科幻小说,更是一部关于人性、生存和希望的深刻寓言,它在我脑海中留下了久久不能散去的印记,让我不断地思考和回味。
评分我可以毫不夸张地说,这本书的书名就足以引发我的好奇心,而阅读过程更是远远超出了我的预期。作者用一种非常沉静而又富有感染力的笔触,描绘了一个被寒冷笼罩的世界,以及在这个世界中挣扎求生的人们。我特别喜欢书中对于情感的细腻描绘,那些在绝望中滋生的爱恋,在分离中的思念,以及在重逢时的喜悦,都写得感人至深。我被那对在寒冬中互相依偎,共同面对未来的恋人所打动,他们的爱情,就像黑暗中最温暖的光,照亮了彼此的人生。同时,我也被那个在失去亲人后,独自一人承担起家庭重担的年轻人所鼓舞,他的坚强和责任感,让我看到了生命的力量。这本书不仅仅是在讲述一个关于气候异常的故事,它更是在探索人类情感的深度和广度,以及在极端环境下,情感是如何成为我们生存下去的强大支撑。它也让我更加珍惜身边那些爱我的人,以及那些我爱的人,因为在生命的长河中,情感是我们最宝贵的财富。
评分这本书所描绘的“没有夏天”的世界,对我来说,不仅仅是一个虚构的背景,更像是一种警示,一种对我们当下生活方式的深刻反思。作者巧妙地将自然灾难与人类社会的变化相结合,展现了一个在极端环境下,文明是如何被挑战,又是如何被重塑的。我非常欣赏书中对于那些试图理解和解决这场危机的科学家和学者们的描绘,他们面对的不仅仅是复杂的科学难题,更是来自社会各方的压力和质疑。我被那个为了寻找导致“没有夏天”的原因,而踏上危险旅程的年轻地质学家所感动,他的勇气和对科学的执着,让我看到了知识的力量。同时,我也被那些在艰难环境下,仍然坚持传递希望和知识的教育者们所鼓舞,他们相信,即使在最黑暗的时刻,教育也是塑造未来的唯一途径。这本书让我看到了,即使在最严峻的考验面前,人类对知识的追求和对未来的信念,是多么的强大。它也让我更加深刻地认识到,我们应该如何平衡科技发展与环境保护,如何更加负责任地对待我们赖以生存的地球。它是一部充满智慧和启示的作品,它让我对人类的未来充满了思考。
评分毫无疑问,这本书是我最近一次阅读体验中的一抹亮色。作者以一种极为写实的手法,将“没有夏天”这个概念带入了生活,让我们能够真切地感受到那个冰封世界的压抑和绝望,但也让我们看到了在严寒中依然不屈的生命力。我特别着迷于书中对于科技与自然的相互作用的探讨,以及人类在面对自然力量时的渺小与伟大。我被那些试图通过科学手段来改变气候,或者至少适应新环境的工程师和科学家们所吸引,他们的探索和努力,是人类征服自然,或者与自然和谐相处的缩影。同时,我也被那些依靠传统智慧和自然规律,顽强生存下来的古老文明所折服,他们的经验,可能正是我们未来需要学习的宝贵财富。这本书让我看到了,即使在最严峻的挑战面前,人类的智慧和适应能力也是无穷的。它也促使我去思考,我们应该如何才能更好地理解和尊重自然,如何才能在发展科技的同时,不破坏我们赖以生存的环境。它是一部充满思考和启示的作品,它让我对人类的未来充满了敬畏。
评分这绝对是我近期读过最令人惊艳的作品之一。作者对于“缺乏夏天”这个概念的演绎,远远超出了我的想象,它不仅仅是物理上的寒冷,更是一种心理上的压抑,一种对常态的颠覆,一种对人类社会秩序的挑战。我非常欣赏作者在描绘这种失序感时的细节处理,比如人们对光线的渴望,对温暖的依赖,以及在缺乏阳光的日子里,情绪的起伏和性格的变化。书中那些为了生存而不得不进行的艰难抉择,以及在这些抉择背后所展现出的复杂人性,都让我久久不能平静。我特别被那个为了保护族群的秘密,而不得不承担巨大压力的长者所打动,他的牺牲和智慧,是整个故事中不可或缺的一部分。作者在构建故事时,对于不同阶层、不同群体在极端环境下的反应,都有着细致的描绘,这使得整个故事更加立体和真实。我看到了那些为了生存而变得冷酷无情的人,也看到了那些即使在最黑暗的时刻,依然保持善良和慷慨的人。这本书让我深刻地反思了我们与自然的关系,以及我们在享受文明成果的同时,是否也应该承担起保护环境的责任。它也让我更加珍惜我们现在所拥有的,那些曾经被我们视为理所当然的四季变化和温暖阳光。
评分读这本书的感觉,就像是坐上了一列缓缓驶向未知的列车,沿途的风景充满了惊喜与惊吓。作者的文笔细腻而富有力量,他能够用最朴素的语言勾勒出最宏大的场景,也能用最细微的笔触刻画出人物最复杂的情感。那个“没有夏天”的设定,不仅仅是一个天气现象,更像是一个隐喻,象征着生命中可能出现的各种危机和挑战,而人类的反应,则是我们面对这些危机时最真实的写照。我特别喜欢书中对于科学探索和民间传说结合的处理方式,它既有严谨的逻辑推演,又有浪漫的想象色彩,让整个故事更加引人入胜。比如,他们为了寻找原因而进行的冒险,那种对未知的好奇和对真相的渴望,让我看到了人类不屈的精神。还有那些流传下来的古老故事,它们在艰难的岁月里,为人们提供了精神的慰藉和信仰的力量。这本书的角色们,他们生活在一个被寒冷笼罩的世界里,但他们并没有放弃对美好生活的追求,他们努力适应,努力创新,努力在绝望中寻找生机。我被那个在冰天雪地里坚持种植作物的农夫所深深感动,他的汗水和坚持,象征着生命的顽强和对未来的信念。这本书让我看到了,即使在最艰难的环境下,人类的创造力和韧性依然能够闪耀出耀眼的光芒。它也促使我去思考,我们如何才能更好地与自然和谐相处,以及在面对挑战时,我们应该如何保持清醒的头脑和积极的态度。
评分我一直对那些能够将宏大叙事与个人情感完美结合的作品情有独钟,而这本书无疑做到了这一点。作者以“没有夏天”这个独特的视角,为我们展现了一个充满挑战的世界,同时又深入挖掘了生活在这个世界中的人们,他们内心的挣扎、成长和蜕变。我特别欣赏书中对于群体互助和个人牺牲的描绘,当生存变得异常艰难,当每个人都面临巨大的压力时,总会有那么一些人,选择承担更多的责任,为他人带来希望。我被那个为了拯救整个社区,而毅然选择牺牲自己的领袖所深深打动,他的勇气和无私,是那个严寒世界里最动人的篇章。同时,我也被那些在绝望中仍然坚持互助,分享资源,共同抵御严寒的普通民众所鼓舞,他们的团结和善良,是人类文明得以延续的基石。这本书让我看到了,即使在最艰难的时刻,人性的光辉也永远不会熄灭。它也促使我去思考,我们应该如何才能更好地与他人合作,如何才能在集体利益面前,超越个人的私欲。它是一部充满力量和温情 Quelles作品,它让我对人类的未来充满了信心。
评分我从未想过,一个关于“没有夏天”的故事,能够如此深刻地触动我。作者的笔触,就像一把精密的刻刀,在时间的画布上,刻画出了一个充满挑战与希望的世界。我特别着迷于书中对于不同地域和文化背景下的人们,如何在同一个极端天气中,发展出不同的生存方式和应对策略。从北方冰封的村落到南方虽然也寒冷但仍有残存绿意的土地,人们的智慧和韧性在不同的场景下得到了充分的展现。我被那个利用残余的煤炭资源,努力维持社区温暖和希望的工程师所吸引,他的科学精神和奉献精神,是那个严寒世界里的一束光。同时,我也被那些依靠传统知识和世代相传的技巧,在冰天雪地中寻找食物和资源的部落所折服,他们的古老智慧,在现代科技失效时,显得尤为珍贵。这本书不仅仅是在讲述一个关于气候异常的故事,它更是在探索人类在面对未知和危机时,所展现出的多样化的生存智慧和文化传承。它让我看到了,即使在最艰难的条件下,人类也能凭借智慧、勇气和合作,找到生存下去的道路。它也促使我去思考,我们应该如何珍视和传承那些属于我们自己的独特文化和知识,因为它们可能在未来的某个时刻,成为我们生存下去的关键。
评分《无夏之年》
评分在设想着小行星轰击地球的后果之余,更为可能的火山灰使地球降温就已经能给人类社会带来巨大灾难,文中出现太多降温作物歉收的字眼。本书的历史考据颇多,尽管局限于欧洲大陆。读罢,地理决定论的观点又得到些许加强。
评分《无夏之年》
评分《无夏之年》
评分在设想着小行星轰击地球的后果之余,更为可能的火山灰使地球降温就已经能给人类社会带来巨大灾难,文中出现太多降温作物歉收的字眼。本书的历史考据颇多,尽管局限于欧洲大陆。读罢,地理决定论的观点又得到些许加强。
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