Blue Revolution: Unmaking America's Water Crisis
By (Author) Cynthia Barnett
Beacon Press
Beacon Press
1st September 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
333.9100973
Paperback
296
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 19mm
403g
Blue Revolution exposes the truth about the water crisis-driven by a tradition that has encouraged everyone, from homeowners to farmers to utilities, to tap more and more. But the book also offers much reason for hope. Cynthia Barnett argues that the best solution is also the simplest and least expensive: a water ethic for America. Just as the green movement helped build awareness about energy and sustainability, so a blue movement will reconnect Americans to their water.
Barnett takes us back to the origins of our water [with] the same vividness and compassion as Michael Pollan.Los Angeles Times
Journalist Barnett explores a simple solution to the growing water crisis in the US, where we use more water than any other culture in the world. That solution: a water ethic. She notes that the green movement has helped raise awareness of the importance of energy and sustainability, and that a blue movement would do much the same: help Americans rediscover their relationship with water, and learn to conserve/recycle and manage it more effectively. And, she adds, it is entirely possible to reverse the damage done by the indiscriminate use of water through those measures and new technologies that can cut agricultural irrigation in half.Book News Inc.
It's a call to action. Barnett takes us back to the origins of our water in much the same way, with much the same vividness and compassion as Michael Pollan led us from our kitchens to potato fields and feed lots of modern agribusiness.Los Angeles Times
Barnett does not come off as a Cassandra, shrieking about looming cataclysm and dumping figures over her readers heads. In Blue Revolution she is part journalist, part mom, part historian, and part optimist, and as a result her text comes off as anything but a polemic.The Boston Globe
Our future depends on the Blue Revolution that Cynthia Barnett advocates, for, as the ancients knew long before modern science did, 'Water is life.'New York Journal of Books
Thorough and packed with data.Kirkus Reviews
Barnetts clarion call to her fellow citizens imagines an America where its ethically wrong to waste water. Using compelling stories from around the globe, she shows that Americas future depends upon our coming to value water not only in the price we pay, but with profound appreciation for each drop.Robert Glennon, author of Unquenchable: Americas Water Crisis and What to Do About It
The roots of a new water ethic are found in the practices of millions of individuals, businesses, and other organizations around the world. Barnett shows how good water use practices can go viral, with massive benefits for society and nature. Blue Revolution offers affordable, practical, down-to-earth solutions for Americas water crisis.Stephen R. Carpenter, Director of the Center for Limnology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Winner of the 2011 Stockholm Water Prize
The book provides an eye-opening overview of the complexity of our water-use problems and offers optimistic but practical solutions.Publishers Weekly
As Aldo Leopold is to the land ethic, Cynthia Barnett is to the water ethic. Her important and hopeful new book is rich with stories about innovative water projects around the world, demonstrating that we can choose thrift over waste, water gardens over cement ditches, local projects over mega-industries, smart over incredibly, stubbornly, self-destructively stupid. She calls us to a respectful water use that restores our spirits, even as it creates thriving biocultural communities. If you use water, you should read Blue Revolution.Kathleen Dean Moore, coeditor of Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a Planet in Peril
Aldo Leopold helped found twentieth-century American environmental thinking with his call for a land ethic. Barnett has done a great service by calling for a twenty-first-century water ethic. She tackles Americas illusion of water abundance in the way past thinkers attacked our old ideas about an endless western frontier. Of the new crop of books on water, this one may be the most important.Fred Pearce, author of When the Rivers Run Dry
Cynthia Barnettis a long-time journalist whose awards include a national Sigma Delta Chi prize for investigative magazine reporting and eight Green Eyeshades, which recognize outstanding journalism in the Southeast. Her first book, Mirage- Florida and the Vanishing Water of the Eastern U.S., won the gold medal for best nonfiction in the Florida Book Awards and was a "One Region/One Book" selection in thirty Florida counties. Barnett earned a master's degree in environmental history and was a Knight-Wallace Fellow at the University of Michigan, where she spent a year studying water. She lives with her family in Gainesville, Florida. From the Hardcover edition.