The Fracking War: A Novel
"It was Uncle Tom's Cabin, not economic data, that turned the page on slavery. It was The Grapes of Wrath, not demographic reports that opened a nation's eyes to Dust Bowl dislocation. Out of that tradition comes Michael J. Fitzgerald's The Fracking War. Here, within a smoldering crucible of social crisis, is a tale of power, money, fateful choices, and consciences aroused. If you like your drill rigs served up within the context of a fast-moving plot line, you've got what you want right in your hands."

--Sandra Steingraber, author, Living Downstream and Raising Elijah

In The Fracking War, veteran investigative reporter Jack Stafford relocates from California to rural Upstate New York to take a job with a small weekly newspaper after the death of his wife, and immediately discovers a citizen rebellion that models itself after Edward Abbey's 1975 novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. In The Fracking War, activists use sabotage to defend their land and lifestyle against what they perceive as industrial terrorism, perpetrated by multinational corporations' environmentally damaging practice of hydrofracking for natural gas and oil.

Set in the pristine Finger Lakes wine country of New York and neighboring Pennsylvania, Stafford and the newspaper staff witness the tragic impacts of fracking on local citizens and their communities--the health risks, water and air pollution, and a rapid increase in crime.

The fictional events in The Fracking War were pulled from newspaper headlines and other documented occurrences not only in the Northeast United States but also across the globe. The fast-paced novel offers a glimpse into an escalating conflict between citizens who want to protect their communities and the nearly out-of-control expansion of the natural gas industry's controversial method of hydrofracking to extract natural gas, affecting homes and communities in uncharted ways.

Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet, said of The Fracking War: "If you've thought the debate over energy policy was a tad dry, this novel might change your mind. God hopes it never comes to this!"
1117509901
The Fracking War: A Novel
"It was Uncle Tom's Cabin, not economic data, that turned the page on slavery. It was The Grapes of Wrath, not demographic reports that opened a nation's eyes to Dust Bowl dislocation. Out of that tradition comes Michael J. Fitzgerald's The Fracking War. Here, within a smoldering crucible of social crisis, is a tale of power, money, fateful choices, and consciences aroused. If you like your drill rigs served up within the context of a fast-moving plot line, you've got what you want right in your hands."

--Sandra Steingraber, author, Living Downstream and Raising Elijah

In The Fracking War, veteran investigative reporter Jack Stafford relocates from California to rural Upstate New York to take a job with a small weekly newspaper after the death of his wife, and immediately discovers a citizen rebellion that models itself after Edward Abbey's 1975 novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. In The Fracking War, activists use sabotage to defend their land and lifestyle against what they perceive as industrial terrorism, perpetrated by multinational corporations' environmentally damaging practice of hydrofracking for natural gas and oil.

Set in the pristine Finger Lakes wine country of New York and neighboring Pennsylvania, Stafford and the newspaper staff witness the tragic impacts of fracking on local citizens and their communities--the health risks, water and air pollution, and a rapid increase in crime.

The fictional events in The Fracking War were pulled from newspaper headlines and other documented occurrences not only in the Northeast United States but also across the globe. The fast-paced novel offers a glimpse into an escalating conflict between citizens who want to protect their communities and the nearly out-of-control expansion of the natural gas industry's controversial method of hydrofracking to extract natural gas, affecting homes and communities in uncharted ways.

Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet, said of The Fracking War: "If you've thought the debate over energy policy was a tad dry, this novel might change your mind. God hopes it never comes to this!"
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The Fracking War: A Novel

The Fracking War: A Novel

by Michael J. Fitzgerald
The Fracking War: A Novel

The Fracking War: A Novel

by Michael J. Fitzgerald

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Overview

"It was Uncle Tom's Cabin, not economic data, that turned the page on slavery. It was The Grapes of Wrath, not demographic reports that opened a nation's eyes to Dust Bowl dislocation. Out of that tradition comes Michael J. Fitzgerald's The Fracking War. Here, within a smoldering crucible of social crisis, is a tale of power, money, fateful choices, and consciences aroused. If you like your drill rigs served up within the context of a fast-moving plot line, you've got what you want right in your hands."

--Sandra Steingraber, author, Living Downstream and Raising Elijah

In The Fracking War, veteran investigative reporter Jack Stafford relocates from California to rural Upstate New York to take a job with a small weekly newspaper after the death of his wife, and immediately discovers a citizen rebellion that models itself after Edward Abbey's 1975 novel The Monkey Wrench Gang. In The Fracking War, activists use sabotage to defend their land and lifestyle against what they perceive as industrial terrorism, perpetrated by multinational corporations' environmentally damaging practice of hydrofracking for natural gas and oil.

Set in the pristine Finger Lakes wine country of New York and neighboring Pennsylvania, Stafford and the newspaper staff witness the tragic impacts of fracking on local citizens and their communities--the health risks, water and air pollution, and a rapid increase in crime.

The fictional events in The Fracking War were pulled from newspaper headlines and other documented occurrences not only in the Northeast United States but also across the globe. The fast-paced novel offers a glimpse into an escalating conflict between citizens who want to protect their communities and the nearly out-of-control expansion of the natural gas industry's controversial method of hydrofracking to extract natural gas, affecting homes and communities in uncharted ways.

Bill McKibben, author of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet, said of The Fracking War: "If you've thought the debate over energy policy was a tad dry, this novel might change your mind. God hopes it never comes to this!"

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149003969
Publisher: Publish Green
Publication date: 11/26/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Michael J. Fitzgerald has been a writer and editor at six daily newspapers in California and is currently a columnist for a daily newspaper in Upstate New York. Fitzgerald has written about politics, education, science and government since starting his career in Napa, California in the 1970s. He was a California correspondent for the Bureau of National Affairs, Inc. of Washington D.C. and a contributing writer for the Reuters news agency while living in Sacramento, California. He taught journalism at Chico State University and California State University, Sacramento and now holds the position of professor emeritus of Journalism from California State University, Sacramento. Fitzgerald is co-owner and operator of a multi-media publishing enterprise called *subject2change Media based in New York. Born in Brooklyn, New York, Fitzgerald grew up in Jamestown, New York, then went to university in California, earning degrees from Sonoma State University and Chico State University. Fitzgerald is married to New York journalist Sylvia Fox and has four children and three grandchildren.
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