Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline
"The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution"

"An existential environmental time bomb threatens to explode an entire way of life for the people of New Hampshire's North Country. Nine unlikely heroes are all that stand between the people and their worst fears . . . This is their story. "

Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada, is hiking the Mahoosuc Range with her companion, a wolf named Cochise. There she meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman. After a unique first encounter the three continue their trip together ultimately finding themselves camping with an unusual assortment of people including a former Olympic paddler, a deer farmer, a retired spook - the first US victim of Lyme disease - and an iconoclast named Thomas who lives in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods and rides a moose named Metallak.

They discover that they have one very important thing in common . . . a deep concern about a private consortium proposing to bring a powerline with massive 150 foot towers through the most beautiful parts of the state, transporting electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston and beyond, posing an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau proud.

Teachers and professors will find this novel a great resource. Adding a new dimension and lively discussion to classes on sustainability, or the American tradition of protest.

In the coming "Age of Electricity" a principal battleground will be over who controls the production and distribution of electric power. Across America today, the battle lines are being drawn. Utility companies, many in an existential battle for survival, are pitted against advocates of a new distributed energy paradigm where small, renewable power replaces today's large electricity generation plants. Most Americans notice that things are changing, but have yet to put together the full picture of what will be a sea change in life for every American.

"Sacred Trust" tells this story in a novel about citizens banding together to stop one especially egregious powerline proposed in the small state of NH where the people deeply cherish their environment.

The power company behind the transmission line proposes to bypass the state - like a giant extension cord - bringing power directly from Canada to the larger cities and suburbs. Like the oligarchs of a previous age, they intend to reap 100% of the benefits and to pass off a large portion of their costs through the generations-long visual pollution of the public commons.

The citizens who stand to lose most are dead set against the project . . . but the political winds are against them. It is in this setting nine unlikely compatriots from across the political spectrum come together to take on the consortium.

Calling themselves The Trust, they engage in creative civil disobedience to stop the project. A second group of citizen activists, writing in the style of the Federalist Papers, produce a series of essays in opposition to Granite Skyway in support of the actions of The Trust. One business writer, in a series of articles scattered throughout the novel, leads his readers through a virtual primer on the battle over a post-carbon energy paradigm, beginning with the 1972 election of Carter and the passage of the National Energy Policy Act including an 8 word amendment added by NH Senator John Durkin that changed everything.

"Sacred Trust" is a hilarious and vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop Granite Skyway, that leads the reader through the hijinks of The Trust, and the series of choices with which we all are currently confronting, or will be, in this new "Age of Electricity".
1127670858
Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline
"The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution"

"An existential environmental time bomb threatens to explode an entire way of life for the people of New Hampshire's North Country. Nine unlikely heroes are all that stand between the people and their worst fears . . . This is their story. "

Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada, is hiking the Mahoosuc Range with her companion, a wolf named Cochise. There she meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman. After a unique first encounter the three continue their trip together ultimately finding themselves camping with an unusual assortment of people including a former Olympic paddler, a deer farmer, a retired spook - the first US victim of Lyme disease - and an iconoclast named Thomas who lives in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods and rides a moose named Metallak.

They discover that they have one very important thing in common . . . a deep concern about a private consortium proposing to bring a powerline with massive 150 foot towers through the most beautiful parts of the state, transporting electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston and beyond, posing an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau proud.

Teachers and professors will find this novel a great resource. Adding a new dimension and lively discussion to classes on sustainability, or the American tradition of protest.

In the coming "Age of Electricity" a principal battleground will be over who controls the production and distribution of electric power. Across America today, the battle lines are being drawn. Utility companies, many in an existential battle for survival, are pitted against advocates of a new distributed energy paradigm where small, renewable power replaces today's large electricity generation plants. Most Americans notice that things are changing, but have yet to put together the full picture of what will be a sea change in life for every American.

"Sacred Trust" tells this story in a novel about citizens banding together to stop one especially egregious powerline proposed in the small state of NH where the people deeply cherish their environment.

The power company behind the transmission line proposes to bypass the state - like a giant extension cord - bringing power directly from Canada to the larger cities and suburbs. Like the oligarchs of a previous age, they intend to reap 100% of the benefits and to pass off a large portion of their costs through the generations-long visual pollution of the public commons.

The citizens who stand to lose most are dead set against the project . . . but the political winds are against them. It is in this setting nine unlikely compatriots from across the political spectrum come together to take on the consortium.

Calling themselves The Trust, they engage in creative civil disobedience to stop the project. A second group of citizen activists, writing in the style of the Federalist Papers, produce a series of essays in opposition to Granite Skyway in support of the actions of The Trust. One business writer, in a series of articles scattered throughout the novel, leads his readers through a virtual primer on the battle over a post-carbon energy paradigm, beginning with the 1972 election of Carter and the passage of the National Energy Policy Act including an 8 word amendment added by NH Senator John Durkin that changed everything.

"Sacred Trust" is a hilarious and vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop Granite Skyway, that leads the reader through the hijinks of The Trust, and the series of choices with which we all are currently confronting, or will be, in this new "Age of Electricity".
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Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline

Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline

by Wayne D King
Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline

Sacred Trust: A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline

by Wayne D King

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Overview

"The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution"

"An existential environmental time bomb threatens to explode an entire way of life for the people of New Hampshire's North Country. Nine unlikely heroes are all that stand between the people and their worst fears . . . This is their story. "

Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada, is hiking the Mahoosuc Range with her companion, a wolf named Cochise. There she meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman. After a unique first encounter the three continue their trip together ultimately finding themselves camping with an unusual assortment of people including a former Olympic paddler, a deer farmer, a retired spook - the first US victim of Lyme disease - and an iconoclast named Thomas who lives in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods and rides a moose named Metallak.

They discover that they have one very important thing in common . . . a deep concern about a private consortium proposing to bring a powerline with massive 150 foot towers through the most beautiful parts of the state, transporting electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston and beyond, posing an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau proud.

Teachers and professors will find this novel a great resource. Adding a new dimension and lively discussion to classes on sustainability, or the American tradition of protest.

In the coming "Age of Electricity" a principal battleground will be over who controls the production and distribution of electric power. Across America today, the battle lines are being drawn. Utility companies, many in an existential battle for survival, are pitted against advocates of a new distributed energy paradigm where small, renewable power replaces today's large electricity generation plants. Most Americans notice that things are changing, but have yet to put together the full picture of what will be a sea change in life for every American.

"Sacred Trust" tells this story in a novel about citizens banding together to stop one especially egregious powerline proposed in the small state of NH where the people deeply cherish their environment.

The power company behind the transmission line proposes to bypass the state - like a giant extension cord - bringing power directly from Canada to the larger cities and suburbs. Like the oligarchs of a previous age, they intend to reap 100% of the benefits and to pass off a large portion of their costs through the generations-long visual pollution of the public commons.

The citizens who stand to lose most are dead set against the project . . . but the political winds are against them. It is in this setting nine unlikely compatriots from across the political spectrum come together to take on the consortium.

Calling themselves The Trust, they engage in creative civil disobedience to stop the project. A second group of citizen activists, writing in the style of the Federalist Papers, produce a series of essays in opposition to Granite Skyway in support of the actions of The Trust. One business writer, in a series of articles scattered throughout the novel, leads his readers through a virtual primer on the battle over a post-carbon energy paradigm, beginning with the 1972 election of Carter and the passage of the National Energy Policy Act including an 8 word amendment added by NH Senator John Durkin that changed everything.

"Sacred Trust" is a hilarious and vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop Granite Skyway, that leads the reader through the hijinks of The Trust, and the series of choices with which we all are currently confronting, or will be, in this new "Age of Electricity".

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781981490301
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 12/13/2017
Pages: 350
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.73(d)

About the Author

Author, Writer, artist, businessman, outdoorsman, activist, Iroquois & recovering politician; all these describe Wayne King.

Wayne began his work life as a Mountain Guide, a life that connected him intimately with the natural world and has remained a touchstone for him. Elected for the first of 3 terms as a State Rep in 1982 followed by 3 terms as State Senator - the youngest in NH history. In 1994 Wayne was the Dem nominee for Governor of NH.

Life after politics took Wayne to West Africa, the founder of The Electronic Community - a team of social entrepreneurs working on development issues in W. Africa. In 1997 King and his lifelong friend Kip Bates played a pivotal role in bringing the Internet to W. Africa, working with Nigerian born US citizen Dr. Chidi Nwachukwu and Dr. Adhiambo Odaga, of the Ford Foundation, to bring more than 500 NGOs in E. Africa into the Internet age, providing hardware, software and training through the generosity and vision of the Ford Foundation. On their first visit to Nigeria, King and his team faced a harrowing ordeal at the hands of Dictator Sanny Abacha's secret police. Arrested and held at gunpoint for more than five hours before gaining their release from a Lagos jail. Abacha died mysteriously just minutes after the team's departure from Nigeria and the country embarked on its rocky road to democratic rule.

In 2004 King launched "Heart of New Hampshire Magazine" and for five years published one of New Hampshire's most acclaimed lifestyle magazines, even as he continued his work in West Africa with Ford Foundation, the World Bank and USAID.

Most recently, Wayne served as CEO of MOP Environmental Solutions, Inc., a public company in the environmental cleanup space.

King's experiences and interests continue to run a broad gamut of the communications industry, as well as public policy, economic and community development; His writings and art reflect this.

Most recently his focus has turned to the more creative corners of his mind and heart, focusing on his art and writing.

In the past 5 years Wayne has won numerous art competitions and his work is becoming widely distributed and sought after. He has also published 5 books: 1 non-fiction, 3 fine art books and his most recent book, a novel, "Sacred Trust.

His biweekly column, "The View from Rattlesnake Ridge" is published by The NH Center for Public Interest Journalism (InDepthNH.org). His work can also be found on numerous other Blogs and Fine Art websites.
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