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The Elements of Life
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Trace the hidden elemental forces shaping life, civilization, and our planet's future—nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium revealed as never before.The Pacific island of Banaba, once lush and intric...
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03 November 2026

Trace the hidden elemental forces shaping life, civilization, and our planet's future—nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium revealed as never before.
The Pacific island of Banaba, once lush and intricately cultivated, has been reduced to an industrial wasteland by the mining of its phosphate‑rich rock. In just a few decades, colonial powers stripped away its soil to fertilize distant fields and uprooted its people, leaving their homeland largely uninhabitable. Unfortunately, Banaba’s fate is far from unique in the history of these three essential elements.
Nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium sustain every living cell, yet their invisible cycles now teeter on the edge of planetary collapse. Kerstin Hoppenhaus exposes how these three elements—essential to agriculture, ecosystems, and human survival—have become both humanity's greatest resource and most dangerous liability. From the catastrophic Beirut explosion to oxygen-starved ocean dead zones, from colonial phosphate mining on Pacific islands to the revolutionary Haber-Bosch process that feeds billions, this groundbreaking work connects elemental chemistry to ecological crisis, revealing the profound consequences of disrupting Earth's ancient nutrient flows.
Perfect for fans of Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction and readers who enjoyed Richard Powers' The Overstory, The Elements of Life masterfully weaves scientific rigor with compelling narrative, tracing nutrients from cosmic origins through geological time to modern industrial agriculture. She illuminates the Green Revolution's paradox—dramatically increased food production alongside catastrophic environmental degradation—while exploring innovative solutions: mycorrhizal networks, precision agriculture, legal personhood for ecosystems like Spain's Mar Menor lagoon, and the urgent framework of planetary boundaries. Her interdisciplinary approach spans geochemistry, marine ecology, agricultural history, and environmental law, offering readers a comprehensive understanding of biogeochemical cycles that rivals works by Jared Diamond and Bill McKibben.
Readers seeking transformative environmental science books for 2026 will discover actionable insights into sustainable farming, nutrient recycling, and planetary stewardship. Hoppenhaus challenges us to reimagine our relationship with Earth's elemental foundations—before we irreversibly destabilize the systems sustaining civilization itself.
Published in Partnership with the David Suzuki Institute
Price: $29.95
Pages: 336
Publisher: Greystone Books
Imprint: Greystone Books
Publication Date:
03 November 2026
ISBN: 9781778403415
Format: eBook
BISACs:
SCIENCE / Earth Sciences / Mineralogy, Rocks, minerals & fossils: general interest, SCIENCE / Natural History, NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection, SCIENCE / Environmental Science, SCIENCE / Chemistry / Environmental, Ecological science, the Biosphere, Conservation of wildlife & habitats, The Earth: natural history: general interest, Earth sciences
“Rigorous, spirited, conversational, and clear, The Elements of Life conveys the constant motion of the Earth: its change and uncertainty, its beauty and diversity, and the powerful forces that bring its landscapes to life. Kerstin Hoppenhaus dwells on our relationship with a complicated world.”
—Jack Lohmann, author of White Light
“Drawing on years of research and reporting, from potash mines in Germany and the oxygen-starved depths of the Baltic Sea to oceanic conveyor belts and processes of soil formation, Hoppenhaus transforms a massive web of science, history, and politics into a vivid story of humans (and the need to feed eight billion people) transforming nature at a planetary scale.”
—Hugh S. Gorman, author of The Story of N
"Kerstin Hoppenhaus is the favorite high school science teacher I never had. In this accessible, engaging read, she shows how three simple elements underlie all life, and how the manipulation of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium by humans has enabled us to wage war, grow food, and dominate the planet."
—Christopher Pollon, author of Pitfall
Kerstin Hoppenhaus is a science journalist and filmmaker based in Berlin. After working for national public television for over a decade, she began developing and producing video and multimedia projects through her own production company, working with clients including the BBC and Undark. She teaches workshops in multimedia storytelling, has a master’s degree in biology, and has won several awards and scholarships for her work in science journalism.
Sarah Pybus has been translating from German for almost twenty years. She has translated several titles for Greystone Books, including Climate Injustice by Friederike Otto, which was nominated for the 2025 Wainwright Prize for Conservation Writing.
Introduction
PART 1: FRUITFUL
Brute Forces
Never Enough
The Law of the Minimum
PART 2: GAINFUL
Nutrients From Overseas
Bread From Air
Monte Kali
Where Is Banaba?
The Treasure Under the Storeknuten
PART 3: HARMFUL
Gasping Cod
The Great Dying
Oceanic Currents
The Breathing Marble
The Great Mobilization
PART 4: MEANINGFUL
Soil Formation in Malawi
Less for the Sea
A Question of Governance
New Relationships
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Epigraph References
Index