Book Review: ‘Category Five’ examines superstorms amid compelling personal memoir

This cover image released by Little, Brown and Company shows "Category Five: Superstorms and the Warming Oceans That Feed From Them" by Porter Fox. (Little, Brown and Company via AP)

I graduated from Middlebury College with Porter Fox just over 30 years ago. We weren’t friends, but it was a small campus and everyone knew something about everybody else. I knew he sailed and wore L.L. Bean like a native Mainer. I didn’t know that he’d spend a good chunk of his career as a journalist documenting the effects of climate change.

“Category Five: Superstorms and the Warming Oceans That Feed Them†is a mouthful of a title, but there’s a lot packed into its 254 pages. Part memoir, part travelogue and part scientific reportage, it’s stuffed with statistics that the cynical will say add up to one conclusion: This planet’s doomed. But while the numbers don’t lie and humanity is certainly going to exceed its self-imposed temperature targets to halt global warming, Fox has written a book that doesn’t read like the sky is falling.

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