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The Trout Pool Paradox: The American Lives of Three Rivers
 
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The Trout Pool Paradox: The American Lives of Three Rivers [Hardcover]

George Black (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 7, 2004
The very rivers that make the best trout streams - fast, cold, and clear - also gave birth to the American industrial revolution. Nowhere has this been more true than in an area not far from New York City where three Connecticut rivers, the Housatonic, the Shepaug, and the Naugatuck, have hosted an emblematic procession of industry, from the first woolen mills and iron foundries to the brass and rubber factories and hydroelectric plants of the twentieth century. Despite three hundred years of development, stretches of these rivers still thrive, offering great trout fishing and a postcard-perfect New England landscape.
The Trout Pool Paradox unravels a conundrum: why does the Naugatuck River teeter on the edge of extinction, while in a parallel valley just a few miles away, the Shepaug appears to flow in a pristine state? Probing this puzzle takes George Black deep into the complex ecology of rivers and into the heart of the human communities on their banks. Presenting intimately detailed stories of early industrialists, nineteenth-century naturalists, and contemporary river stewards and their adversaries, The Trout Pool Paradox throws brilliant light on our dynamic relationship with nature and on the conflicting demands we will make on our waterways in a postindustrial age.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

At the heart of the trout pool paradox and Black's work is the notion that the "limpid currents at the base of waterfall" are where both fish and factories flourish. To plumb this irony, Black follows the history of Connecticut's Housatonic River and the divergent tales of two of its main tributaries: the Shepaug ("the Platonic ideal of a trout stream") and the Naugatuck ("a chemical sewer"). Tracing the region's history from the white settlers' arrival in the 17th century, Black shows how, thanks to a little luck, bad business and regional pride, the Shepaug remained more isolated than the Naugatuck, which became the power source (and the toilet) for Waterbury and its once booming brass business. But this is more than just a history book. Black (The Good Neighbor) goes to great lengths to show how a trout river is created by nature, interviewing the environmentalists, fishermen, lawyers, politicians and businesspeople who deal with the difficult task of balancing the river's ecological and economic impact. When it comes to researching these rivers, Black leaves no stone unturned, both searching out historical texts and local experts and literally wading in the rivers and flipping stones to examine the rivers' insects. Black's writing smoothly runs the gamut from highly scientific to the poetic prose you might expect from a fly fisherman raised in Scotland. And while the mixing of genres—science, history, fishing, etc.—may initially scare off some single-minded readers, Black's open-minded approach to each subject makes for a comprehensive account of how water shapes our natural and man-made environments. Photos.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* An ardent fly-fisherman, Black became deeply curious about the complex history of Connecticut's beautiful Housatonic watershed, home of his favorite trout-fishing spots. He is particularly intrigued with the opposite fates of two tributaries, the pristine Shepaug and the nearly moribund Naugatuck. What combination of chance and purpose protected one from industrialization and turned the other into a dammed and fouled ghost of its former self? And what can be learned from contemplating what Black calls the "trout pool paradox," the fact that the trout pool, beautiful and bountiful, possesses the very elements--limestone, fast water, and a forest canopy--needed for iron production, the first of several toxic industries to bring prosperity and pollution to Connecticut? Emulating the king of narrative nonfiction, John McPhee, Black, energetically inquiring and entertainingly informative, introduces a colorful cast of characters historic and living, from iron barons and brass magnates to politicians, scientists, fishermen, and environmental activists, as he tells the fascinating stories of wild trout and trout hatcheries, hydropower and blast furnaces, PCBs and caddis flies, unintended consequences and court cases. A many-faceted and illuminating tale of one man's love of fishing, three rivers, and the tremendous challenge of restoring rivers to health. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (April 7, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618310800
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618310807
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,028,182 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not just for fishermen, May 21, 2005
By 
David Fiske (Capital District, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Trout Pool Paradox: The American Lives of Three Rivers (Hardcover)
Despite the title (trout pools are sections of brooks where cool water collects
and serve as feeding grounds for trout), author George Black has said "this
really isn't intended to be a fishing book..."

The three Connecticut rivers he looks at--the Naugatuck, the Shepaug, and
the Housatonic--have experienced entirely different fates, despite their
proximity and generally similar environments. The Naugatuck became an
industrialized river, a convenient waste stream for Waterbury's brass factories
and other industrial plants along its length. The Shepaug, tapped to feed the
city of Waterbury's lust for water, became a flow-impaired shadow of its
former self, except for a few months in the spring. The Housatonic, despite
damming for hydroelectric purposes, was able to remain a prime trout-fishing
and recreational river (despite being polluted with PCBs).

Providing a meandering tracing of the history of these rivers, Black deals with
deeper concepts, such as the difference between restoring and preserving a
natural environment, man's attempts to create areas that match our vision of
'nature' (by stocking rivers with non-native trout species, for example), and our
very understanding of nature. We tend to stand back and picture nature as something
that is obvious and given and apart from us, and yet man must live by exploiting
and sometimes altering natural resources, and the pristine natural environments
we imagine are archaic and probably unattainable.

Interestingly enough, just in the spring of 2005 (after publication of this book), a
court settlement was reached which will largely restore the flow of the Shepaug.
Black discusses this lawsuit and foresaw the parties reaching a settlement of
the matter rather than continuing litigation.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought as Deep as Rivers, February 27, 2009
By 
Iron Blue (Buffalo NY USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Trout Pool Paradox: The American Lives of Three Rivers (Hardcover)
First let's get one thing straight- Black is a superb writer who understants his subject. He has served as a writer and an editor for several environmental publications. In Trout Pool Paradox He follows the histories of three very similar Conncticut rivers each with different history and a different fate; one seriously degraded, one modified beyond recognition,and another(still a trout stream) but heavily effected by human activities. He digs into the social, political and historical forces that made them different. As a previous reviewer said, he wants to give his readers a perspective on how we relate to our natural environment. Black higlights some of the conflicts and contrdictions that arrise when we try to restore someting that has been lost forever. He wants the reader to realize a key paradox of environmentalism--that as much as we may want to live in a natural environment, our very living there changes it.

Black does a marvelous job of describing both the historical and contemporary figures who have affected the rivers. Everyone, he finds, has a different take on the current conditions of the three streams and have different but reasonable views about what needs to be done. They all have different solutions to the Trout Pool Paradox.

The book is fascinating, beautifully written, and thought provoking. A must read for anyone who loves free flowing rivers

-Doug
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