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Confluence: A River, The Environment, Politics, and the Fate of All Humanity
 
 
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Confluence: A River, The Environment, Politics, and the Fate of All Humanity [Hardcover]

Nathaniel Tripp (Author), Howard Dean (Foreword)


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Book Description

May 10, 2005
We are the river, and the river is us. We carry the same chemicals; pesticides and heavy metals, antibiotics and estrogen in our bloodstreams. From the Mekong River in Vietnam, where he served as platoon leader during the Vietnam War, to the Connecticut River near his farm in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, rivers have coursed through the life of Nathaniel Tripp. And as part of the Connecticut River Joint Commission, a bi-state advisory body made up of members from two states the river divides, Vermont and New Hampshire, he has gotten an education about rivers beyond any he could have imagined. He has worked with scientists, bureaucrats, politicians, lobbyists, property holders, and advocacy groups to balance federal, state, corporate, and individual interests.
This book is a true confluence of art and science, politics and pragmatism, ideas and plans for action. It highlights the ways in which rivers connect us all to one another. While our society has made great progress in terms of local environmental improvement, such as cleaner water, we’re still dodging the big issues, such as global warming. And it’s getting worse. We have lost the vision of our planet gained in 1969 when astronauts sent back photographs taken from the moon. Projects such as the restoration of the Atlantic salmon are politicized to become red herrings that divide us, and today’s runaway “free market” economy eschews long-term planning and marginalizes true environmentalism. The time is right for someone to remind us, in a clear and meaningful way, about the things that matter most. And Nathaniel Tripp does just that.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

As a member of the Connecticut River Joint Commission, journalist Tripp, author of the Vietnam memoir Father, Soldier, Son, juggles a multitude of conflicting tasks—helping oversee a disappointing salmon restoration program, monitoring pollution, negotiating with the hydroelectric dam utility that pegs river flows to the electricity spot-market, and pondering a killing spree by an antiregulatory fanatic. His is a valuable insider's perspective on the challenges of practical environmentalism, but it's one partly obscured by the jumbled structure of this meditation on the river and its discontents. Evocative nature scenes are interspersed with bureaucratic wrangles with industry, canoe trips with then Vermont governor Howard Dean (who wrote the book's foreword), ruminations on environmental apocalypse and condemnations of the industry-fomented, antienvironmentalist "property rights" movement. Many patches are stylish and illuminating, but the crazy-quilt organization impedes the development of Tripp's important defense of unfettered government regulatory power in the management of environmental issues. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Tripp, author of Father, Soldier, Son (1997), has long been fascinated by the flow of water: "I could find more in the swamp down below the high school than I ever could in the classrooms." And he has spent some of his happiest days on the Connecticut River, paddling its waterways with his sons, investigating Atlantic salmon restoration, and visiting its broad, glittering reservoirs. Each chapter in this slender volume discusses a specific watershed of the Connecticut, which divides Vermont and New Hampshire, with the exception of a side trip to northern Quebec. Tripp is a knowledgeable guide, whether discussing the dwarf wedge mussel or hydroelectric politics. The state of our rivers is grim, to be sure, but one person, argues Tripp, can make a difference. Much like the beginnings of a river itself: "The river begins as all rivers do, with a drop of rain, a wisp of fog." Rebecca Maksel
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 175 pages
  • Publisher: Steerforth (May 10, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1586420887
  • ISBN-13: 978-1586420888
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.2 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,784,710 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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wedge mussel
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New England, Fifteen Mile Falls, New Hampshire, Connecticut River, Clean Water Act, Comerford Dam, Indian Stream, Comerford Reservoir, Conte Refuge, Endangered Species Act, Northern Cree, Upper Valley, Carl Drega, Moore Dam, National Park Service, Nine Islands, Pacific Northwest, Turners Falls, West River, White House, Mississippi Delta, Mulliken's Pitch, United Nations
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