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octavia_cade 's review for:
informative
inspiring
medium-paced
It's no secret that Teen Vogue has been, over the past few years, one of the shining lights in American journalism. In work like the articles collected in this book, they've certainly been more thoughtful about climate change than many of the mainstream news organisations - frankly, the less said about those places the better. So I was excited to read this, especially as the publisher's note at the front of the book says that the contributors here range from ten to twenty-five. Good writers all, and good for them. It makes the book accessible to young readers, I think, to have so many of them represented here.
The book's structured into three sections: reporting, activism, and intersectionality. That's useful, as is the continual linking of each of these concepts to each other as the book goes on. I do think that it falls quite often into repetition, which makes the read in places seem somewhat longer than it actually is, but then this is a collection of articles, not a narrative planned out in advance, and perhaps that's one of the risks an editor takes in a collection like this.
The book's structured into three sections: reporting, activism, and intersectionality. That's useful, as is the continual linking of each of these concepts to each other as the book goes on. I do think that it falls quite often into repetition, which makes the read in places seem somewhat longer than it actually is, but then this is a collection of articles, not a narrative planned out in advance, and perhaps that's one of the risks an editor takes in a collection like this.