Where the Water Goes: Life and Death Along the Colorado River

· Penguin Random House Audio · Narrated by Fred Sanders
3.5
2 reviews
Audiobook
9 hr 25 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

“Wonderfully written…Mr. Owen writes about water, but in these polarized times the lessons he shares spill into other arenas. The world of water rights and wrongs along the Colorado River offers hope for other problems.” —Wall Street Journal

An eye-opening account of where our water comes from and where it all goes.

The Colorado River is an essential resource for a surprisingly large part of the United States, and every gallon that flows down it is owned or claimed by someone. David Owen traces all that water from the Colorado’s headwaters to its parched terminus, once a verdant wetland but now a million-acre desert. He takes readers on an adventure downriver, along a labyrinth of waterways, reservoirs, power plants, farms, fracking sites, ghost towns, and RV parks, to the spot near the U.S.–Mexico border where the river runs dry.

Water problems in the western United States can seem tantalizingly easy to solve: just turn off the fountains at the Bellagio, stop selling hay to China, ban golf, cut down the almond trees, and kill all the lawyers. But a closer look reveals a vast man-made ecosystem that is far more complex and more interesting than the headlines let on.

The story Owen tells in Where the Water Goes is crucial to our future: how a patchwork of engineering marvels, byzantine legal agreements, aging infrastructure, and neighborly cooperation enables life to flourish in the desert—and the disastrous consequences we face when any part of this tenuous system fails.

Ratings and reviews

3.5
2 reviews
Fan Page
December 10, 2022
It’s really good and it talks about climate change, which I really want to help the world about because everybody just wants to go around trash. It’s just piece of nothing to them like just a little piece of trash can change the whole world more tsunami’s storms winter going hard can happen. I just really hope this world can change climate change and global warning before the world ends and animals start dying, and our health starts becoming more unhealthy.
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About the author

David Owen is a staff writer for The New Yorker and the author more than a dozen books. He lives in northwest Connecticut with his wife, the writer Ann Hodgman.

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