Get your free preview of Force of Nature

Excerpts of my new book, Force of Nature, are now up at HarperCollins' Browse Inside site. Before the May 10 pub date, you can take a peak at the full prologue and other chapter excerpts. Maybe it'll whet your appetite for my story of one of the unlikeliest green business revolutions imaginable.

Please also take a look at the reader buzz over at Amazon Vine. For me, here's nothing better than seeing so many readers of my book come away with so many smart, unique and very different takes on the the subject of sustainability and big business. I'd like to share one comment from R. Tompson:
If you don't have a particular bone to pick with Wal-Mart, and you think many in the environmentalist camp are scaremongers, you will find this book mildly left of you. If you think Wal-Mart is Satan's minion, sent to reverse progress and enslave Third World babies, you'll find the book a bit to your right. For those reasons, it must not be too bad ;-)

I'm of the more conservative persuasion, and was a little put off by the stronger rhetorical flourishes. That said, the work Wal-Mart pursued (and pursues) to make money by going green is inspiring.

The story is cleanly told, well written, interesting throughout. A good case study for transforming any large institution, environmentally or any other way.

Wal-Mart Meets the River Guide

When I first met Jib Ellison, I had no inkling I had found my next book. Mainly, I felt skeptical about this former river guide turned sustainability consultant who lived off the grid north of San Francisco and endeavored to persuade big, mainstream companies like Wal-Mart to go green.

Seriously -- Wal-Mart?

But then I learned more about Ellison, an affable forty-something outdoorsman-philosopher whose first venture brought Soviet and American delegations together on wild rivers in both countries -- in the midst of the Cold War. Diplomacy and friendships sprang out of the bonds that inevitably develop when people row together down hair-raising rapids.

Now Ellison engaged in an entirely different kind of diplomacy, bringing corporate titans and environmentalists together so they, too, can focus on their common ground -- and how protecting the planet can actually be the greatest business opportunity of the century.

The river guide can rattle off one example after another of freshly converted business leaders pursuing the least polluting, least wasteful, and least energy-hogging practices.  Why do companies such as Wal-Mart do this? Because they have realized (with Ellison's help) that this isn't just the most planet-friendly way of doing business. It also can be the most profitable way of doing business.

Read synopsis and early reviews of Force of Nature here. Check out reader reviews from Amazon's Vine Program here.

Here’s a prime example of what’s been going on: It began with a toy truck, which Wal-Mart sold by the million.
Encouraged by Ellison to take some baby steps toward greater sustainability, Wal-Mart shaved a few inches off the cardboard packaging of its toy fleet. Then they did the math: The move saved 4,000 trees -- good for the planet, obviously. But it brought other consequences, too: Smaller packages required 497 fewer shipping containers to pack and a million fewer barrels of oil to move the products from factory to warehouse to store. That led to $2.4 million in savings for the retailer within a year. Wal-Mart would have to sell $60 million in toys to earn that same amount. 

That was just one product, but it seemed to light a fire within Wal-Mart 's former CEO, H. Lee Scott, to uncover other missed opportunities to be both sustainable and profitable. Overcoming his own skepticism, Scott gave the green light to keep going green, and allowed Ellison to open the normally secretive company to outsiders with fresh ideas -- even the former president of the Sierra Club, who once called Wal-Mart "the devil."

What happens when a Wal-Mart -- or American dairy farmers or the global fashion industry, both of which are following Wal-Mart's lead -- start looking for green choices throughout their businesses because it serves the bottom line? The potential is mind-boggling, and represents one of the most hopeful green trends today.

The unlikely partnership of a river guide and a CEO has helped set in motion what could be the next industrial revolution -- the story I explore in my new book, Force of Nature.  I hope you'll find it as intriguing and important a tale as I did.

LA Times Festival of Books

This weekend is the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, at its new location at Los Angeles's University of Southern California campus. Please join me for my panel discussion at USC's Annenberg Auditorium 3:30pm Sunday, May 1: Consumer Moments: The Dam, the Docks and Wal-Mart. I'll be discussing my new book, Force of Nature: The  Unlikely Story of Wal-Mart's Green Revolution.

Although the publication date is not until May 10, my publisher, Harper Collins, has made copies of Force of Nature available for sale early only at the LA Times festival, so come on by and see me for a signed copy.

Festival directions and event map at at the main LATFOB website.

Force of Nature: Four Cool Things

Force of Nature: The Unlikely Story of Wal-Mart's Green Revolution, doesn't come out until May 10, but there's already lots going on:

1. Publisher's Weekly calls my new book stirring, fair-minded and fascinating:
Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Humes offers a stirring story of how ecologically responsible practices are increasingly benefiting the bottom line, and how… the biggest retailer in the world is, slowly but surely, encouraging a change for the better. A fascinating, fair-minded look at the congruence between environmentalism and business, and the behemoth at the intersection.
2. Kirkus Reviews, meanwhile, says Force of Nature is a "fascinating story of the evolution of corporate responsibility for the environment."

3. Some early book tour highlights: I'll be at the LA Times Book Festival April 30-May 1 (first time the fest will be at USC instead UCLA); at the ClimateOne discussion series at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on May 16, and at some great California independent book stores -- Kepler's in Menlo Park on May 12, Copperfield's in Sebastopol on May 14, and Vroman's in Pasadena on May 17.

4. Reader Reviews: Readers participating in Amazon.com's "Amazon Vine" book preview program have already posted several thoughtful and insightful advance reviews of Force of Nature. Check them out here.

BTW, you can pre-order a copy via Kepler's, Copperfield's, Vroman's, Barnes & Noble, or Amazon.

Standing Tall - For Now

California's redwoods and giant sequoia have survived a very long time without us -- and in spite of us.

But now the surviving forests of these most massive living things on the planet (like the General Sherman sequoia at left) face new pressures from a changing climate and lack of snowmelt. My latest story in Sierra Magazine takes a look at the future of  these ancient trees, and at what an adventurous band of researchers and students are doing about it:
There's something about being near a mature coast redwood, its spire impossibly tall, or a broad sequoia, with its lava flow of soft, knobby bark, that evokes a visceral response. It's less like viewing a tree and more like stumbling on a geologic wonder, an arboreal version of the Grand Canyon or Niagara Falls. People use their library voices while walking among redwoods. Maybe it's being in the presence of something that can outlive 50 human generations--a single tree, standing now in the Sierra Nevada, born during the Bronze Age, and whose grandfather shed its cocoa-colored cones before recorded history.... read more

Did the Feds Bust a Gangster or a Hero?

From my just-posted magazine piece on the fascinating and troubling case against celebrated anti-gang activist, Alex Sanchez (recipient of awards, grants and a favorite of the mayor of Los Angeles right up until his bust):
What Sanchez didn't know when he participated in those calls was that the FBI was listening in, convinced that he was leading a double life, publicly opposing gangs in his day job, then moonlighting after hours as a "shot-caller" of the Los Angeles street-gang-turned-international-crime-syndicate known as Mara Salvatrucha—MS-13...

It seemed like an open-and-shut case. But in the weeks and months that followed Sanchez's indictment, new questions threatened to undermine the prosecution's pat narrative. These were questions about missing government witnesses, mistaken identities, overlooked evidence, the qualifications of reputed gang experts, and the gray areas that anti-gang activists such as Sanchez must, of necessity, operate in.
Read the article in California Lawyer magazine for the whole story.