
Book Review: The lie of the footprint in Auden Schendler’s “Terrible Beauty”
Since the inception of the environmental movement, we have been fed a steady diet of personal piety where meticulous accounting of our plastic sorting and carbon footprints will somehow absolve us of environmental sin. This also manages to instill a perpetual guilt. We carry this quiet shame into every grocery aisle, operating under the fiction that if we just count our moral points carefully enough, the planet might survive.
But as we stand over our recycling bins staring at an unraveling biosphere, that fiction wears thin, giving way to a more liberating truth: we are not the architects of this cage.
I first encountered Auden Schendler’s voice not on a dust jacket, but through a podcast interview hosted by Drew Petersen. Listening to the veteran Senior Vice President of Sustainability at Aspen One while he and Petersen chatted on a ski lift, I was instantly struck by his willingness to speak candidly about his industry.
Drawing from his multi-decade tenure in corporate environmentalism, Schendler openly dismantled the comforting myth that voluntary emissions metrics and corporate certifications are anything more than a PR shield.
His book, Terrible Beauty: Reckoning with Climate Complicity and Rediscovering Our Soul, expands on that bluntness. It offers a profound validation for the exhausted environmentalist: the individual is not to blame.
None of us asked to be born into a society entirely enslaved to fossil fuels, yet we are trapped in a system where stepping away feels like exile. The fossil fuel industry knew about climate damage for decades, systematically buried the data, and manufactured a neutered version of “personal environmentalism” specifically to shift the moral burden away from systemic production and onto the individual.
We made choices without the facts.
Stylistically, however, the book attempts to weave this climate science and macro-policy recommendation into a personal memoir, resulting in a hybrid that at times feels disjointed from the greater thematic aspirations. Most chapters pair genuinely fascinating behind-the-scenes insights into corporate climate strategies with anecdotal riffing on literature and family life. While these flights of imagination are likely meant to evoke the poetic, oxymoronic tension of the book’s title, they do not always pay off.
This structural fragmentation is particularly frustrating because it constantly detracts from the book’s most valuable segments. When Schendler stays grounded in his actual material reality like recounting his grueling, first-hand experiences trying to drive sustainable change within a business, providing compelling breakdowns of how Aspen One negotiated with corporate giants like Kimberly-Clark, or offering brief, illuminating glimpses into the lives of genuine grassroots advocates the book excels.
In these moments, he brilliantly exposes how Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) frameworks, and general corporate environmental management have utterly and completely failed us.
This theatrical reality becomes even more plane as we examine the very vanguards of the outdoor industry. The corporate brands and coalitions Schendler expects to lead his political charge often falter. As a board member and foundational voice for Protect Our Winters (POW), Schendler’s central thesis is that we must leverage a hundreds-of-billions-of-dollars outdoor industry into a unified lobbying force to storm Capitol Hill.
But the assumption that outdoor retailers possess an inherent moral alignment with the earth or their communities dissolves under the slightest material analysis.
Consider REI, the industry’s gold standard, widely romanticized as a member-owned consumer cooperative supposedly immune to the worst impulses of predatory capitalism. As a member of the co-op myself, I have admiration for some of the work they do, the programs they organize, and the products they sell. At the same time, REI has repeatedly demonstrated that when the veneer of progressive stewardship collides with the prime directive of capital accumulation, capital wins every time.
This internal exploitation is mirrored by a broader corporate desperation to maintain political access at all costs. To secure a “seat at the table,” REI joined other outdoor organizations in signing an industry letter that expressed strong support for President Trump’s nominee for Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum, a politician notorious for championing fossil fuel drilling and public land deregulation.
Though massive backlash from members and retail staff eventually forced newly appointed CEO Mary Beth Laughton to issue a public apology and retract the endorsement as a “mistake,” the original impulse exposed the industry’s rot.
It proved that the corporate outdoor space is entirely willing to cozy up to climate arsonists if it protects their immediate market access.
Ultimately, REI behaves exactly like the corporate monoliths Schendler critiques: its defining focus is the protection of its billions in net sales and gross profits.
Expecting a multi-billion-dollar retailer to prioritize the biosphere over its bottom line is not just naive; it is a fundamental misunderstanding of what a corporation is engineered to do. I admire the optimism and acknowledge the potential political power analyzed by Schendler but remain skeptical in light of recent events.
Even if we accept Schendler’s reliance on grassroots organizing in tandem with corporate boardrooms, his strategy relies heavily on a broad coalition of outdoor enthusiasts that oftenr results in odd bedfellows. Writing from his perspective as a councilmember in the surprisingly contentious town of Basalt, Colorado, he exposes fractures in the environmental community. We see states like Montana oust work horse public land defenders like Jon Tester, or see the gorgeous natural sprawl of Wyoming push to build a highway through the Grand Tetons. The very coalition Schendler assumes will save us is actively eating itself, loving the outdoor activity while voting against preservation.
He falls back on recurring refrain: run for office and make change. Despite his own detailing of how miserable, difficult, and utterly frustrating running and holding public office actually is the reality is the world needs more conservationists in seats of power.
This is where the validation of Schendler’s rage curdles into a profound intellectual frustration. I am deeply exhausted by the polite incrementalism purveyed by so many contemporary climate authors, and Schendler sits in a grey area.
He is furious at corporate inaction, yet he remains a capitalist looking for capitalism to simply be reformed, softened, or rendered efficient enough to save us.
He calls for “true stakeholder capitalism” where a framework incorporating progressive taxation, higher minimum wages, and slashed defense spending into corporate planning. These are wonderful things but are not a panacea for our present woes.
It is an idealistic compromise that sounds entirely like an attempt to dress socialism up in a corporate suit just to satisfy liberals.
Asking “How does this impact business?” is precisely the wrong question.
To believe that the “right regulations on corporatists” will save us is to suffer from a historical amnesia. The last century of history has proven that capitalist markets are designed to capture, dilute, slow-walk, and dismantle any regulatory guardrail that threatens the prime directive of profit accumulation.
Schendler targets neoliberalism but refuses to call for its end; he demands equity but refuses to enshrine a system capable of delivering it.
By stopping short of a structural critique, Schendler ignores what ecological socialists call the “metabolic rift.” The concept describes how capitalism inherently disrupts the interdependent, natural exchange between humanity and the earth.
The relentless drive for commodity production inevitably tears the ecological fabric of the planet, depleting the soil and the atmosphere faster than nature can regenerate. You cannot regulate away an existential rift that is woven into the DNA of the free market itself.
It should be noted too that Terrible Beauty remains intensely micro-focused on US economics. In doing so, it largely ignores the Global South, which continues to bear the catastrophic excess burden of a crisis it did not create.
Within this domestic framework, market-based mechanisms like carbon offsets are allowed to persist, functioning as modern financial indulgences that allow the ultra-wealthy to buy a clean conscience while continuing their crimes against the biosphere.
To his credit, Schendler does spend a worthy amount of time on intersectionalism and the connections between social, civil, and racial movements in the United States. Allowing for a broader view of the issue was a pleasant aside from the core discussion surrounding business. We no longer have the luxury of time for slow-motion, step-by-step corporate reformations. Our literal survival depends on taking massive, uncompromising systemic action now — whether the private sector wants it or not.
In the end, Terrible Beauty succeeds wildly as a corporate autopsy, but falls short as a roadmap. If our current crisis is an engine of civilizational destruction, we cannot content ourselves with trying to steer it more carefully through corporate boardrooms or by telling everyday citizens to simply run for local city councils. We must be willing to shut the engine down entirely, and pivot away from linear systems to closed loop ones.

