Reviews Journalist Wen Stephenson praised
How to Blow Up a Pipeline in the
Los Angeles Review of Books, describing Malm's approach as "erudite and, above all, morally serious" and stating that the book "methodically dismantles the social movement doctrine of 'strategic nonviolence. He wrote that he expected the book to be dismissed by many as
fringe or dangerous, but described that potential dismissal as "a very serious mistake". Also in the
Los Angeles Review of Books,
Scott W. Stern wrote that Malm "makes a stirring moral case for the necessity of escalation" and described the book as "passionate, powerful, deeply flawed, and profoundly necessary", stating that it "may excite some readers, anger others, convince still others, and alienate many, but it is unlikely to be forgotten by a single one". Writing in
The New York Times Book Review,
Tatiana Schlossberg reviewed
How to Blow Up a Pipeline as "compelling but frustrating", writing that violence is problematic because "ultimately it's impossible to control" and noting that the book did not actually include instructions for creating explosions. In a negative review in
Canadian Dimension, a
left-wing magazine, James Wilt criticized the book for not discussing the potential repercussions of sabotage, describing that omission as "an astonishing abdication of responsibility". Wilt wrote that "to advocate for [property destruction] without any mention or planning for the inevitable backlash, particularly outside of situations of armed conflict, is to do the work of the
carceral state for it". In another negative review in
Jacobin, an
American socialist magazine, Chris Maisano criticized the book for assuming that political violence could be controlled, saying that it "has a fundamentally interactive quality that Malm largely fails to account for, and under conditions of intense political contestation, it is all too easy to move from advocating violence against property to violence against people."
By notable figures A review by
Tim DeChristopher in
YES! Magazine said that
How to Blow Up a Pipeline "offers a humble and nuanced case for how sabotaging fossil fuel infrastructure and machinery might be 'synergetic and complementary' to a movement largely centered around nonviolent mass mobilization". In
The New Republic,
Benjamin Kunkel wrote that the book "does not explain
how to blow up a pipeline so much as argue for
why to do so", stating that Malm's argument "provokes a few natural objections" and concluding by agreeing with the author's position that individual political tactics should not be fetishized. After being asked about the ethics of the
eco-terrorism depicted in his novel
The Ministry for the Future, author
Kim Stanley Robinson told
The World Today that he personally believed in nonviolence. He additionally suggested that
How to Blow Up a Pipeline would be a better book for thinking about the issue, because it "makes a distinction that [
The Ministry for the Future] is not good at, which is the distinction between sabotage and violence against property or destruction of property as against physical attacks on people".
Opposition In response to Ezra Klein's mention of
How to Blow Up a Pipeline in
The New York Times, a
Fox News article by
Lindsay Kornick claimed that Klein "appeared to condone eco-terrorism", writing that "Klein appeared to understand and even sympathize with the author". After Malm was a guest on
The New Yorker Radio Hour in September 2021 and spoke about central ideas from the book, another article in Fox News by the same author described him as a "climate change extremist who advocates for 'intelligent sabotage. In
The Spectator World,
Grayson Quay argued the fact that the interview took place was hypocritical because an
anti-abortion activist who had written a book titled "How to Blow Up an Abortion Clinic" would not have gotten the same opportunity, describing Malm as a "
scofflaw". In October 2021, the
Fort Worth Intelligence Exchange (a
fusion center in
Texas) circulated a document about
How to Blow Up a Pipeline nationwide. The document, which was later obtained by
Property of the People, detailed concerns about the book and its content while stating that it was not connected to any known threat.
Other reactions The environmental direct action group,
Tyre Extinguishers, who began deflating tyres on
SUVs in March 2022 as an act of climate protest, and are now active in 17 countries, say they were inspired to start their group by
How to Blow Up a Pipeline. Malm called the group's actions a form of "extremely peaceful and gentle sabotage...anyone can deflate an SUV: it is virtually child's play. It requires no formal organization, no leadership, no funds, no implements other than bits of gravel or beans or green lentils. Given the infinitely replicable nature of the action—sabotage as meme—its potential for making SUV ownership less convenient and attractive could not be discounted." == Film adaptation ==