Rewatched “Chinatown” after reading “The Dreamt Land” and it has a completely new meaning. Was so much better knowing what is behind all the shenanigans with water manipulation in Southern California.
Rewatched “Chinatown” after reading “The Dreamt Land” and it has a completely new meaning. Was so much better knowing what is behind all the shenanigans with water manipulation in Southern California.
October bookclub choice selected by my bookclub buddy and friend Carol. Looking forward to starting today, read Mark Arax's book "The King of California" which was excellent.
California is so progressive in everything except water management. It is sad the state continues to neglect this important factor. They are allowing corporate farmers come up with a water management plan, that is like letting the patients run the asylum.
"On a summer day in the San Joaquin Valley, 101 in the shade, I merge onto Highway 99 past downtown Fresno and steer through the vibration of the heat."
OMG. Not sure a 25-hour audiobook about my state‘s water crisis and its relationship to systemic agricultural craziness was the perfect choice for #24in48...😳😂 (I did listen at 1.75 speed, but still!) It was really good, though. Excellent writing, and I loved the memoir elements. I may not be able to eat an almond again without a pang of guilt, but I‘m certainly glad I read this. (Next up for the readathon - ANYthing light and fun!! 😛)
I‘m halfway through this book. At 530 pages it is not a light summer read. It is, however, a beautifully written book and one that lots of people ought to be required to read - particularly California politicians. It‘s the story of water, the California land grab, politics, agriculture in the arid West, greed, and ingenuity.