"Fascinating."The Toronto Star
"... eye-opening... Sweeping in scope yet grounded in intriguing particulars, this offers fresh perspective on an economic system 'we cannot live with... and cannot live without.'"Publishers Weekly“Excellent.”Resilience“With knowledge, skill and stories of inventors, entrepreneurs and conservationists, [Stoll] traces developments in technology, transportation, energy, communication, trade and finance.”Nature“A concise and interdisciplinary history of capitalism … an excellent read for history enthusiasts.”World History Encyclopedia“A story of incredible ingenuity and villainy that begins in the Doge’s palace in medieval Venice and ends with Jeff Bezos aboard his own spacecraft. Mark Stoll’s revolutionary account places environmental factors at the heart of capitalism’s successes and reveals the long shadow of its terrible consequences.”Climate and Capitalism Ecosocialist Bookshelf
“A sweeping and yet highly readable overview of human economic history, from foraging to modern industrial society. It surpasses all others in richness of detail and attention to environmental consequences.”Donald Worster, University of Kansas“Our world today is threatened by a resource extractions-driven global economy, the most severe symptom of which is the fossil-fueled warming of our planet. Could tackling the climate crisis be the critical first step in charting a new course that places planet over profit, and sustainability over stuff? Read this book and learn how we got into this mess and how we might just get out.”Michael Mann, Presidential Distinguished Professor, University of Pennsylvania and author of The New Climate War“This book offers important messages – but also fascinating asides and illuminating statistics, as it tells what may be the central tale of the human story.”Bill McKibben, author The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon: A Graying American Looks Back at his Suburban Boyhood and Wonders What the Hell Happened“Profit is a must-read for anyone who’s ever wondered, ‘where do we go from here?’ The answer begins with understanding how we got here, and that’s the compelling story Profit tells. From the first human miners through the impetuous chaos of the Industrial Revolution to our current impasse between short-term profit and long-term survival, Stoll explains how ‘we have always profited at nature’s expense’ – and how, if we truly understood the magnitude of this price, we’d know that nature offers the key to our survival.”Katharine Hayhoe, Texas Tech University, author of Saving Us: A Climate Scientist’s Case for Hope and Healing in a Divided World“Incisive and compelling … an enjoyable deep read.”Ramya Swayamprakash, H-Environment“Profit: An Environmental History is not a formal history book with dates and names of heroes; it rather uses a welcome transdisciplinary approach (obviously centered on profits) to understand how the global environment suffers from capitalism. It intelligently mixes the social, economic, and environmental facets altogether.”Electronic Green Journal“Stoll invites us to reflect on how our addiction to fossil fuel, combined with consumer credit and individualized Protestant ethics, has shaped a turbo-charged capitalism. … [Profit] offers us a view, both disturbing and welcome in equal measure, on how neoliberal capitalism has splintered social cohesion, including religious and environmental consciousness.”International Review of Social History“[A] sweeping yet impressively detailed history of economics that centers the chilling environmental consequences of humanity’s march toward progress.”Rice Magazine
12/05/2022
“Capitalism’s story is tightly woven together with the natural world,” according to this eye-opening survey from environmental historian Stoll (Inherit the Holy Mountain). Exploring how human development has reconfigured the natural environment for more than a million years, Stoll spotlights such innovations as the generation of fire, the mining of minerals, and the translocation of plants and animals. Discussions of the Agricultural Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, and the post-WWII Great Acceleration feature profiles of individuals who helped launch new stages of capitalism (Christopher Columbus, Andrew Carnegie) or raised awareness about the destructive impact of human progress (George Perkins Marsh, Rachel Carson). Stoll is particularly enlightening on the ways in which early capitalist practices, including the extraction of gold and silver to make coinage, resulted in air and water pollution, species extinction, soil erosion, drought, and even climate change. Throughout, he offers poignant reminders that even a system as ubiquitous and seemingly unassailable as capitalism has the potential to be disrupted by plague, natural disasters, and other forces beyond human control. Sweeping in scope yet grounded in intriguing particulars, this offers fresh perspective on an economic system “we cannot live with... and cannot live without.” (Jan.)