Chattanooga Times Free Press

DO SOMETHING

The effects of climate change endanger the lives of four teens

- BY TINA CHAMBERS CHAPTER16.ORG

“TWO DEGREES” by Alan Gratz (Scholastic Press, 384 pages, $18).

“Nature can take care of itself,” proclaims a climate-change denier in Alan Gratz’s latest middle-grade thriller, “Two Degrees.” But by the end of the story, Gratz and his four teenage protagonis­ts have made a strong case to readers that the opposite is true.

As Gratz explains, human influence on climate change began with the dawn of the industrial era. Since that time, Earth’s temperatur­e has risen more than a degree. If human-caused climate change hits two degrees, numerous climate disasters are predicted. Using three alternatin­g narratives, Gratz shows young readers what those relentless phenomena could look like on the ground, in the lives of children just like them.

Akira lives in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California. She and her dad love to visit a grove of giant sequoia trees located nearby. But on a hot, dry and windy day in October, they suddenly find themselves caught in a raging wildfire. In their desperate escape from the flames, they partner with others who cross their path, helping one another through a terrifying inferno that destroys everything it touches: “A burning house looked to Akira like a glowing skull, its broken windows hollow like eye sockets, its exterior walls black against the bright orange fire that filled it. It felt like they were driving through a movie about the end of the world.” Separated from her father at one point, Akira must rely on everything she has been taught about survival in the forest when her familiar world turns alien and deadly.

Meanwhile, outside the small Canadian town of Churchill, Manitoba, two young boys are locked in a life-anddeath struggle with a hungry polar bear. One thousand miles south of the Arctic Circle, it’s minus 16 degrees Celsius, but best friends George and Owen are unfazed by the temperatur­e and loaded down with supplies as they take off on a snowmobile, headed for a remote fishing cabin. Owen knows a lot about polar bear behavior since his parents run a local tour company. Churchill is “a town with more polar bears than people,” and tourists come to catch a glimpse of the animals. But melting glaciers and habitat loss are driving them closer to human population­s, while leaving them hungrier and more dangerous than ever before. And when the boys stop for a bathroom break and Owen spots a baby bear, he is distracted for a moment by its cute behavior. That’s when the mama bear strikes. Wounded but resolute, George and Owen are tested to their limits when another bear identifies them as a convenient meal and they must depend on each other to live.

In Miami, meteorolog­y buff Natalie has long worried about “The Big One. The giant mythical hurricane that would destroy the entire southeast coast of Florida.” Natalie and her mom are used to weathering hurricanes and know what to do to protect themselves and their home. But over the last few years, the storms have grown more frequent and more vicious. When the giant hurricane finally hits, all Natalie’s fears are realized, and it isn’t long before she is swept away by the floodwater­s, with only her neighbor’s ill-tempered little dog for a companion. As she comes up for air, literally, she is met by other victims of the surging waters, who aid one another for a little while, before their makeshift protection­s are once again upended by the violent and unpredicta­ble storm surge. Natalie will need tremendous strength and courage and a great deal of luck to find her way home.

Alan Gratz is a master of this genre, and “Two Degrees” is one of his best. He keeps readers on the edge of their seats through nonstop action, while creating realistic characters with sympatheti­c backstorie­s, complicate­d feelings and lots of heart. Just as Gratz points out that human behavior makes climate change worse, he also reminds us that humans are the only hope for making things better — even when problems seem unsolvable. As Natalie’s friend Patience says, “Nobody has to do everything, but everybody has to do something.” With “Two Degrees,” Alan Gratz has done something truly remarkable.

For more local book coverage, visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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 ?? PHOTO CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHAPTER16.ORG ?? Alan Gratz
PHOTO CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHAPTER16.ORG Alan Gratz

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