On November 20, 2017, NYU's Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute hosted a 2-hour-long conversation between Wallace-Wells and Michael E. Mann to discuss the controversy around the article.[1]
Accompanying the article are a series of extended interviews with scientists. These include paleontologist Peter Ward,[4] climatologist Michael E. Mann,[5] oceanographer Wallace Smith Broecker,[6] climatologist James Hansen[7] and scientist Michael Oppenheimer.[8] In addition an annotated edition of the article was published online that includes inline footnotes.
In February 2019, Wallace-Wells published The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming.[9] The book was excerpted in The Guardian.[10]