The Anthropocene is the era of man to which author John Green devoted his latest book. In short essays, he describes various achievements which, in his view, are exemplary for the “human age”. Green evaluates each of these aspects based on a rating system with a star rating.
wrong idea
Canada geese only get two stars for the fact that they breed as hardy as humans and populate exotic gardens, even if they can’t account for it. Velociraptor gave Green three stars. These find their way into the book, as most people think of Velociraptor as the image shaped by the movie “Jurassic Park”. Contrary to this belief, archaeological finds suggest that they were carrion-eating, feathered, but flightless dinosaurs that weighed less than 15 kilograms.
John Green thinks that the parallels between the Hall of Presidents at Disney World and the two “most important institutions of the Anthropocene”, nation states and GmbH are narrative great. What these three have in common is that they are an idea that we believe in.
But Greene also described very serious personal experiences, such as his depression, in his first non-fiction book, especially in the chapter from the movie “My Friend Harvey.” In the essay on the invention of the QWERTY keyboard, the author states, among other things, that he is most interested in humanity in systems created in collaboration. Not only does it at this point manage to convey interesting facts to readers without making them feel like you’re holding a non-fiction book.