volume 59, issue 2 | Winter 2019 143 Reference Books
N. Krysak,
The Discovery Tool Cookbook: Recipes for Successful Lesson Plans (Chicago: American Library Association, 2016);
H. McClure, P. Bravender, and G. Schaub,
Teaching Informa- tion Literacy Threshold Concepts: Lessons for Librarians (Chicago:
American Library Association, 2015); R. Pun and M. Houlihan,
The First-Year Experience Cookbook (Chicago: American Library
Association, 2017).
Urban Health Issues: Exploring the Impacts of Big-City Living. By Richard V. Crume. Santa Barbara, CA: Green-
wood, 2019. 295 p. Acid-free $61 (ISBN 978-1-4408-6171-
0). E-book Available (978-1-4408-6172-7), call for pricing.
Due to poverty, climate change, and other factors,
the world’s populations are becoming more urban. While
“urban” is relative to various countries, the shift from rural
to urban is happening worldwide. At the beginning of the
twenty-first century, the world’s populations became, for
the first time, evenly split between urban and rural. By mid-
century, the prediction is that most populations will live in
urban areas. It follows that where there are more people,
there are also more health concerns. Richard V. Crume’s
Urban Health Issues: Exploring the Impacts of Big-City Living is an eminently readable, accessible volume that addresses
these health concerns.
The author’s purpose in writing the book is “to help
urban dwellers and health professionals understand the
complexities of urban health and prepare for a future when
maintaining a healthy urban environment will be of utmost
importance” (p. x). Because urban health encompasses so
many elements, this topic is an excellent one for a general
audience. Each of the twenty-three essays explains an issue,
its impact on health, how various cities have implemented
or planned to address the issue, and recommendations
for those living in urban areas. There are also occasional
city spotlights, which detail how a place has specifically
addressed the health issue—Melbourne, for example, has
implemented a detailed urban forest plan to plant 3,000
trees a year to address warming temperatures—along with
brief essays from experts. An appendix offers suggestions for
urban dwellers, and there is a directory of resources.
While “urban health issues” might immediately bring
to mind a factory chugging out polluted air, it ranges from
“environmental pollution and the spread of infectious dis-
ease to drug and alcohol abuse and the importance of social
support networks” (p. ix). In other words, as the world
becomes more urban, these will just be called “health issues.”
Plus, issues such as stress management, water and sanitation,
and health care access affect all of us, urban or rural.
Updated works on this topic are necessary, as health
concerns can change rapidly.
Urban Health , edited by San-
dro Galea et al. (Oxford University Press, 2019) would be a
comparable volume, though more academic. However,
Urban Health Issues: Exploring the Impact of Big-City Issues is suitable
and recommended for public and academic libraries of all
sizes.
—Tracy Carr, Library Services Director, Mississippi Library Commission, Jackson, Mississippi