Here Comes the Sun: A Last Chance for the Climate and a Fresh Chance for Civilization’ by Bill McKibben

Published in August 2025, this nonfiction book is McKibben’s most direct call yet to speed up the solar revolution. He argues that sunlight and wind are now the cheapest energy sources. If you’re looking for data mixed with story clarity, this book:

  • Focuses on how solar and wind power are expanding faster than any energy source in history
  • It matters as we see optimism and strategy: proof that clean energy is already underway

4. ‘Birch and Jay’ by Allister Thompson

This is actually a fiction novel (it goes under climate-fiction type) with an engaging story. We also see the future-crisis setting. Published in April 2025, the author tells the story of two people whose lives keep circling back to each other in a small rural town. It’s a quiet reflection on loss and how people rebuilt:

  • It focuses on how personal relationships mirror the natural world
  • It matters as we see how the author uses human connection just to send us a reminder on what’s at stake in a place that all we call home

5. ‘Life on a Little-Known Planet: Dispatches from a Changing World’ by Elizabeth Kolbert

Published in November 2025, this new nonfiction collection gathers the author’s reports. She writes about melting glaciers, communities that are trying to adapt, and so much more. Her writing stays rooted in fact but never loses the human detail:

  • As we mentioned, it is nonfiction type which is written in investigative style; and it also was published by Crown Publishing Group, featuring in Kirkus Reviews as a Most Anticipated Fall 2025 release
  • Also, Kolbert is a Pulitzer Prize–winning author for The Sixth Extinction, so it is just adding authority to this work

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