
Clamor
How Noise Took Over the World - and How We Can Take It Back
1 July 2025
Territory Rights — Worldwide.
Description
An eye—and ear—opening investigation into how the cacophony of our ever-noisier world affects our health, our well-being and our planet
Pneumatic drilling from building sites. The dull roar of planes overhead. Your colleague’s phone conversations in an otherwise silent office. Noise is everywhere: disrupting our sleep, ratcheting up our stress, destroying our concentration—yet it’s a problem that many of us shrug off once the immediate annoyance passes. In Clamor, Chris Berdik reveals noise as one of the most pervasive yet under-acknowledged pollutants in our daily lives, the harms of which extend far beyond our hearing, from our children’s learning outcomes to our longevity to the natural world around us.
We systemically neglect life’s sonic dimension at our peril—not only driving up the racket but failing to harness sound’s great potential. Berdik introduces us to the researchers, rock stars, architects and many others who are finding surprising ways to make our world sound not only less bad, but better. Rising above the ever-increasing din, Clamor is an urgent—and ultimately inspiring—call to reconsider our relationship to our world’s soundscapes.
Reviews
"Finally, a book that raises a necessary clamor about the perils of a noisy world! Chris Berdik shows us just how much is at stake when we can’t hear ourselves think and animals can’t find their way home. It’s time to listen and bring back the soundscapes we actually want." — Florence Williams, author of The Nature Fix
"Chris Berdik has expanded our thinking on the paradox of living with a bad thing—noise—and its twin, the loveliness of sound... By recognising and shaping it, we can turn up the harmony and turn down both the acoustic and psychological vexation." — Susan Rogers, author of This Is What It Sounds Like
"Chris Berdik’s Clamor comes at the perfect time. The ‘appetite for sonic refuge,’ as he puts it, has become a universal need in an era of ever-growing attacks on our basic senses. This book is a suitably calm and clear-eyed guide to the resistance." — John Lingan, author of A Song For Everyone: The Story of Creedence Clearwater Revival