Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

nprbooks:

image
image

NPR turns 50 this year, so we’re celebrating some of the movies, music and books from the year of our birth, 1971 – like Dr. Seuss’s sadly prophetic The Lorax, which is even more prescient now in the wake of the recent U.N. climate report.

Our own Elizabeth Blair talked to scientists, environmentalists and educators about the book’s legacy – people like Mark Gozonsky, a writer and high school English teacher in Los Angeles whose students have analyzed The Lorax in the context of global warming. “He kind of says ‘I told you so,’ like, I told you this was going to be bad and now it’s bad,” Gozonsky says. “The book ends on a question mark … 'Well, what are you going to do about it?’ And that’s the very question mark that we land on today.”

Check out the full story here!

– Petra

  1. weedontalwaysknowwhatsbestforus reblogged this from nprbooks
  2. the504meliortist reblogged this from nprbooks
  3. shadesofhappy reblogged this from nprbooks
  4. ms-interpret reblogged this from nprbooks
  5. doctoruniverse1632 reblogged this from nprbooks
  6. stanfave reblogged this from lemongrasslibrary and added:
    Value and Support NPR and PBS.
  7. woo-minhee02 reblogged this from nprbooks
  8. nprbooks posted this
    NPR turns 50 this year, so we're celebrating some of the movies, music and books from the year of our birth, 1971 --...