What The Reviewers Say

Mixed

Based on 10 reviews

The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations

Daniel Yergin

What The Reviewers Say

Mixed

Based on 10 reviews

The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations

Daniel Yergin

Mixed
Edward Lucas,
The Times (UK)
Fans of the author’s previous books will appreciate the snappy prose and plethora of well-told anecdotes. The precise details of the first Saudi oil shipment to the US, for example (in 1948), or the Vietnamese territorial claim in the South China Sea (1933) might seem geeky and dull. But as related by Yergin, they are revealing and apposite.
Pan
Adam Tooze,
The New York Times Book Review
Yergin’s selection follows the contours of the fossil fuel economy, as seen from the point of view of the major oil and gas suppliers...But what about the rest? If energy is the theme, why does Yergin concentrate only on the producers? Oil and gas are worthless without demand. But the world’s big consumers — India, Europe and Japan — barely figure in his book.
Rave
David Holahan,
USA Today
At a time when solid facts and reasoned arguments are in retreat, Daniel Yergin rides to the rescue. The Pulitzer Prize-winning author and energy savant is armed to the teeth with enough telling statistics to sink an oil tanker.
Pan
Bill McKibben,
The Washington Post
We are...in a climate emergency. But you’d never know that from Daniel Yergin’s new book...written in magisterial mode, staring down from the heights of history at the great men who make it.
Mixed
Pilita Clark,
Financial Times (UK)
... what looks like the book for this moment...Alas, it does not quite deliver.
Positive
Joseph C. Sternberg,
The Wall Street Journal
This is, at heart, a very American tale of buccaneering, can-do spirit.
Positive
Simon Montlake,
The Christian Science Monitor
... an ambitious, pithy survey of the evolving landscape of oil and gas that squeezes in vignettes of a 15th century Chinese navigator, intra-OPEC feuds, and Vladimir Putin’s pique at U.S. frackers.
Mixed
Jim Magill,
The Houston Chronicle
Yet in a narrative as wide-ranging as this, it’s perhaps inevitable that some truly impactful figures fail to get their due.
Rave
Kirkus
The latest on global energy geopolitics from the pen of an expert.
Positive
Publishers Weekly
Yergin provides a lucid, judicious overview of global energy and its discontents, with colorful though not always relevant historical background. But there’s not much new, and the basic picture is of a world where energy is abundant, cheap, widely available, and therefore not a coveted prize. The result is a well-informed yet surprisingly ho-hum rundown of how energy issues affect world affairs..