Clutter Control: Giveaway v. Throwaway


On my morning walk, I spotted this apt book title atop a pile of curbside donations. It was good to see this particular "clutter" bound for a new home instead of an old landfill. As always, giving away beats throwing away in every way.

Recognizing our clutter can be someone else's treasure is a subject I like to talk about over at the Garbology Facebook page. I'm happy so many old and new friends are stopping by there every day to share their ideas on the "4 Rs" - reusing, recycling, repurposing and refusing (to bring stuff into the house in the first place).  Got an upcycling suggestion or trash tale of your own? Bring 'em here.

Monkey Girl Summer Reading

The Kindle eBook edition of Monkey Girl, my book about the greatest battle over evolution and creationism since the famous Scopes Trial, is on summer special: just $1.99.

Not sure how much longer that price will last, but you can't beat an 88% discount, courtesy of my publisher, Harper Collins. For background on the case, see my LA Times column, Unintelligent Designs on Darwin, or the Washington Post review of Monkey Girl.

A Fracking Story

Here's my latest story in the July/August issue of Sierra Magazine:
The supple hills of Southwestern Pennsylvania, once known for their grassy woodlands, red barns, and one-stoplight villages, bristle with new landmarks these days: drilling rigs, dark green condensate tanks, fields of iron conduits lumped with hissing valves, and long, flat rectangles carved into hilltops like overgrown swimming pools, brimming with umber wastewater. Tall metal methane flaring stacks periodically fill the night with fiery glares and jet engine roars. Roadbeds of crushed rock, guarded by No Trespassing signs, lie like fresh sutures across hayfields, deer trails, and backyards, admitting fleets of tanker trucks to the wellheads of America's latest energy revolution.

This is the new face of Washington County, the leading edge of the nation's breakneck shale gas boom. Natural gas boosters, President Barack Obama among them, have lauded it as a must-have, 100-year supply of clean, cheap energy that we cannot afford to pass up.

But unlocking half-billion-year-old hydrocarbon deposits carries a price, and not everyone shares in the bonanza. For every new shale well, 4 million to 8 million gallons of water, laced with potentially poisonous chemicals, are pumped into the ground under explosive pressure--a violent geological assault. And once unleashed, the gas requires a vast industrial architecture to be processed and moved from the wells to the world. Imagine the pipes, compressors, ponds, pits, refineries, and meters each shale well in Pennsylvania demands, planted next to horse farms, cornfields, houses, and schools. Then multiply by 5,000.

"It's changed everything, all right," says Pam Judy, a resident of Carmichaels, in neighboring Greene County. Her now-unsellable dream home sits 780 feet downwind of three enormous gas compressors, which appeared in 2009. "It sounds like helicopters in the backyard," she says. "The fumes make me dizzy. My children get headaches and nosebleeds. Some opportunity...."
Read more in "Fractured Lives" in the new issue of Sierra Magazine. I traveled to Pennsylvania and Ohio to investigate the health and environmental impact of fracking, and learned that the so-called 100-year supply of clean energy is really only proven to be 11 years worth of gas -- and that it's being extracted in such an extreme and wasteful manner that its greenhouse gas footprint exceeds that of coal.  

Narrative Nonfiction: 3 Amazing Books

Great narrative nonfiction sweeps a reader into a world, a time, a life or a place. The subject can be exotic or prosaic, it almost doesn’t matter – it’s the “Four ‘I’s that define such writing and compel you to read on: immersion, immediacy, insight and "inside-ness."

Hear the cartilage cracking in the back of an aging athlete stretched out on the ground before a hushed crowd, as player and spectators try to coax one more flash of brilliance out of a stiff and weary body. Feel the mixture of exultation and horror as brilliant, driven minds give birth at once to the most creative and destructive of modern inventions, the computer and the H-Bomb. Rail at the senseless loss of a child’s life in a country so foreign and different that it had always eluded your imagination and interest – until a certain book, a certain intimate, passionate narrative, sucked you into a world and changed your mind and heart.

That’s why I love the powerful genre of narrative nonfiction. Or call it literary journalism or the nonfiction novel. Pick your label, narrative nonfiction is a small, poorly defined, but inspiring bookshelf where artistic and literal truth take a walk together through great storytelling. It’s what I aspire to write and what I read with pleasure, and here are three very different examples I recommend.

Open: An Autobiography
Andre Agassi is officially the author of this brutally honest story of a life in professional tennis, but the writer was actually Pulitzer-winner J.R. Moehringer, author of The Tender Bar and (in September 2012) Sutton, who kept his name off Agassi's book because, as he puts it, the midwife doesn't go home with the baby. But he does deliver a story that grabbed me from the first lines, in which Agassi awakens on his hotel room floor in agony, unable to move, contemplating the last U.S. Open in a storied career. We learn he despises the game of tennis, and has done so from the moment his crazed father constructed a bazooka-like ball machine and aimed it like a weapon at his seven-year-old son. Yet Agassi lies there wishing that the end was not upon him. Open is a textbook on how to do narrative nonfiction right.

Turing's Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe
Who knew that my Mac Mini was a direct descendant of America's project to beat the Soviets to the hydrogen bomb? And who better to tell the story of the birth of the digital era, of computers that were conceived because we needed to calculate terrible explosions and end-of-the-world trajectories, than George Dyson? He grew up with the Princeton University scientists who made it happen, and with a physicist father who pointed to an old fan belt on the ground and explained to his three-years-old that it was "a piece of the sun." And that made perfect sense to the boy, for this is how Dyson's mind works, and why he could write such a compellingly unsettling mix of historical nonfiction, science narrative and visionary explanation of mindful machines. Before computers learn to think, Dyson writes, they will learn to dream.

Mountains Beyond Mountains
Tracy Kidder is my hero of narrative nonfiction. His under-appreciated Among Schoolchildren sparked some of my own writing ambitions. I've read that Mountains Beyond Mountains is Kidder's favorite of his own work, the story of Dr. Paul Farmer's Herculean efforts to create a functioning health care system in rural Haiti. Kidder's portrait of the brilliant, bristly Farmer, whose inspiring, dogged selflessness somehow bridges the disparate worlds of Harvard Med and Haiti through startling selflessness, is unforgettable storytelling, which, when it comes down to it, is the highest praise I know. This book's been around for a few years, but its power and relevance have only grown, as the mission of Farmer's Partners in Health has expanded to Africa, and he is now a United Nations special envoy to Haiti.

Interested in Narrative Nonfiction? Check out these earlier posts: Getting Started: Writing Narrative Nonfiction and Why Great Research Enables Great Writing.

Freakonomics Does Garbology

The good folks at Freakonomics are hosting a Garbology Q&A, so head on over and ask your most burning questions about the strangely compelling world of  trash, waste, recycling, garbage-to-energy, hoarding, our single-use, disposable economy -- and how we can find a way back.

How did trash get to be our leading export?  What landfill is known as the "Disneyland of Dumps?" How did a family of four reduce their trash can to the size of a mason jar? Why are we subsidizing so much junk mail that it now makes up more than half the post office's deliveries -- and one out of every 100 pounds headed to the landfill? Why is recycling a lousy solution (but please do it anyway -- it's all we've got)?

Join Freakonomics' trashiest conversation all this week. And for some quick Garbology background, see my essays at the Wall Street Journal here and here, at Forbes, or my Q&A at the LA Times.


Update: Your Garbology questions answered.


Garbology Out, Fresh Air, CNN and More



My new book Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash came out this week. Highlights include my conversation with Terry Gross on National Public Radio's Fresh Air, and CNN's report on my visit to L.A.'s Garbage Mountain -- one of the many colorful settings in Garbology.




UpdateGarbology also is featured in the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, Los Angles Times, and elsewhere; get the full Media Update here.

Book Giveaways: Visit the Garbology Facebook Page and you'll automatically be entered in a drawing for a signed copy of Garbology if you like the page or leave a comment sharing your favorite tip for being less wasteful. The drawing is May 5.

Meanwhile, over at Frugalista.com, Natalie McNeal also has a Garbology giveaway underway.