Society of Environmental Journalist Awards (Science/Technology) 2011

 

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$14.99
ISBN-13: 9780061537141
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Harper Perennial, 4/2011

Shell Games
Craig Allen Welch

Shell Games is a wonderful combination of solid reporting, good historical research and fine writing. In it, Seattle Times environment reporter Craig Welch tackles the issue of geoduck clam poaching and smuggling. It is an issue that could easily be reported as a local story, but Welch expands it into an international one, making clear to readers who live outside the Pacific Northwest why the issue matters. The original investigative reporting on the black market for these aquatic creatures makes it a terrific work of journalism; the strong narrative as the author follows undercover agents keeps the reader engaged from start to finish.


$26.00
ISBN-13: 9780802715586
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Walker & Company, 8/2009
Judges were impressed by this book's originality and ambitious approach. Heart of Dryness explains the global water crisis through the eyes of the Bushmen of Botswana, a group of persecuted people who have learned to survive in the Kalahari Desert and its longstanding drought. Workman provided a point of view rarely found or captured in North American books and wrote with eloquence, grace and objectivity. Judges said he raised serious questions about how water has been used as a political tool and showed the bold steps some people from different walks of life will take to protect their sense of home.

$22.50
ISBN-13: 9780813035079
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: University Press of Florida, 5/2010
Disguised as a regional book about Florida, Paving Paradise is an absolute must-read for anyone concerned about regulatory incompetence and accountability, especially that of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and its enormous influence on how our nation's land is destroyed and its water polluted by unwise development. The authors spent more than three years investigating state and federal agencies that just couldn't say no to developers. Their exhaustive research is highly evident in this book, not just in connecting the dots between different projects but also in gaining the trust of key officials for hard-hitting candor and insight. Commendable. Gutsy. An excruciatingly well-documented and thorough examination of what went wrong in the Sunshine State. "This is top-notch investigative journalism," one judge said.

$16.00
ISBN-13: 9781416594833
Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Published: Free Press, 7/2011
Yellow Dirt is an outgrowth from Judy Pasternak’s series of investigative articles for the Los Angeles Times dating back to 2006. Set in the four corners region of the southwest, Yellow Dirt is a well-researched account of how Navajo people were exploited for uranium by industry and neglectful government agencies. Painting a chilling picture of the health and environmental consequences, the dramatic storytelling follows this long-hidden tragedy in an immensely personal way. A compelling read, difficult to put down, and devastating in its message.