
"Not so fast, argues historian Paul Sabin, who in The Bet attempts to use their wager to narrate parallel biographies of Simon and Ehrlich, as well as a US political environmental history of the past half-century. The result is a revealing tale."--Jon Christensen, Nature
"Informative, charming, and highly readable."--Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution "A wonderful new book . . . and a fantastic introduction to population-resource debates of the late-twentieth century. It will be the required first reading on this topic in my future courses."--Roger Pielke, Jr., The Energy Collective "An illuminating, judicious, and engaging examination of the conflict between environmentalists and their critics over the past five decades."--Glenn C. Altschuler, Tulsa World "A joy to read; Sabin weaves a vivid historical narrative rich with classic characters. . . . The Bet is both a cautionary tale and a call to order."--Erle Ellis, Chronicle of Higher Education "[A] good introduction to the history of modern environmentalism and an object lesson in how such debates become polarized and then locked in place."--Sharon Kingsland, Journal of American History A Best Science Book of 2013, New Scientist Won the Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Prize given by Yale University. Founded to honor outstanding scholarship by a junior faculty member in the Humanities. "The Bet provides an important contribution to canonical works in environmental history and environmental studies. It is a remarkable story of a critical moment in the environmental movement, and Sabin has told it expertly."--Frederick R. Davis, Florida State University "In telling the story of Ehrlich and Simon's bet, Paul Sabin offers a compelling analysis of two very different, but equally important, ways of understanding the future of humans and the environment that still shape the world of environmental politics today."--Jay Turner, Wellesley College "Paul Sabin's The Bet is wonderfully conceived, sharply focused and entertainingly executed. In the story of a famous bet between two men of large egos, he manages to touch on the most basic problems we face in trying to come to terms with our current environmental crisis."--Richard White, author of Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America "A refreshingly readable and consistently insightful portrait of the ferocious American politics of global population and resources since the 1960s - and of two implacable enemies who strangely resembled one another."--J.R. McNeill, author of Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the 20th-century World "Paul Sabin vividly and creatively explores the half century battle over environmental policy by telling the story of the clash--and famous 'bet'--between Paul Ehrlich, the prophet of population doom, and Julian Simon, the advocate of technology and markets. My own wager is that The Bet will also provide a very valuable and timely framework for understanding today's great environmental debates. In fact, I will double down on that bet!"--Daniel Yergin, Pulitzer-prize winning author of The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World and of The Prize