Entropy is a dramatic visual call to arms by environmental photographer Diane Tuft, documenting the rapid transformation of the Great Salt Lake in Utah. Through breathtaking aerial and terrestrial photography, Tuft captures the lake’s shrinking shoreline, shifting mineral deposits, and the vibrant yet fragile ecosystems threatened by climate change and water diversion. The book explores the concept of entropy—the inevitable descent from order into disorder—as a metaphor for our planet’s environmental decay. Accompanied by essays from Stacey Epstein and Bonnie K. Baxter, the work serves as both a scientific record and a sublime artistic warning about the urgent need for conservation.