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In the face of widespread misinformation and misunderstanding, a
climate scientist ventures into the vast heart of America's new oil
country on just two wheels. Recently recovered from his epic
bicycle journey that took him from the Delaware shore to the Oregon
coast, distinguished climate scientist David Goodrich sets out on
his bike again to traverse the Western Interior Seaway-an ancient
ocean that once spread across half of North America. When the
waters cleared a geologic age ago, what was left behind was vast,
flat prairie, otherworldly rock formations, and oil shale deposits.
As Goodrich journeys through the Badlands and Theodore Roosevelt
National Park and across the prairies of the upper Midwest and
Canada, we get a raw and ground-level view of where the tar sands
and oil reserves are being opened up at an incredible and
unprecedented pace. Extraordinary and unregulated, this "black
goldrush" is boom and bust in every sense. In a manner reminiscent
of John McPhee and Rachel Carson, combined with Goodrich's wry
self-deprecation and scientific expertise, A Voyage Across an
Ancient Ocean is a galvanizing and adventure-filled read that gets
to the heart of drilling on our continent.
After a distinguished career in climate science as the Director of
the UN Global Climate Observing System in Geneva, David Goodrich
returned home to the United States to find a nation and a people in
denial. Concerned that the American people are willfully deluded by
the misinformation about climate that dominates media and politics,
David thought a little straight talk could set things right. As
they say in Animal House, he decided that "this calls for a stupid
and futile gesture on someone's part, and I'm just the guy to do
it." Starting on the beach in Delaware, David rode his bike 4,200
miles to Oregon, talking with the people he met on the ultimate
road trip. Along the way he learned a great deal about why climate
is a complicated issue for many Americans and even more about the
country we all share. Climate change is the central environmental
issue of our time. But A Hole in the Wind is also about the people
Dave met and the experiences he had along the way, like the
toddler's beauty pageant in Delaware, the tornado in Missouri,
rust-belt towns and their relationship with fracking, and the
mined-out uranium ghost town in Wyoming. As he rides, David will
discuss the climate with audiences varying from laboratories to
diners to elementary schools. Beautifully simple, direct, and
honest, A Hole in the Wind is a fresh, refreshing ride through a
difficult and controversial topic, and a rich read that makes you
glad to be alive.
A thoughtful and illuminating bicycle journey along the Underground
Railroad by a climate scientist seeking to engage with American
history. The traces of the Underground Railroad hide in plain
sight: a great church in Philadelphia; a humble old house backing
up to the New Jersey Turnpike; an industrial outbuilding in Ohio.
Over the course of four years, David Goodrich rode his bicycle
3,000 miles east of the Mississippi to travel the routes of the
Underground Railroad and delve into the history and stories in the
places where they happened. He followed the most famous of
conductors, Harriet Tubman, from where she was enslaved in
Maryland, on the eastern shore, all the way to her family sanctuary
at a tiny chapel in Ontario, Canada. Travelling South, he rode from
New Orleans, where the enslaved were bought and sold, through
Mississippi and the heart of the Delta Blues. As we pedal along
with him, Goodrich brings us to the Borderland along the Ohio
River, a kind of no-mans-land between North and South in the years
before the Civil War. Here, slave hunters roamed both banks of the
river, trying to catch people as they fled for freedom. We travel
to Oberlin, Ohio, a town that staunchly defended freedom seekers,
embodied in the life of Lewis Leary, who was lost in the fires of
Harpers Ferry, but his spirit was reborn in the Harlem Renaissance.
On Freedom Road enables us to see familiar places-New York and
Philadelphia, New Orleans and Buffalo-in a very different light:
from the vantage point of desperate people seeking to outrun the
reach of slavery. Join in this journey to find the heroes and
stories, both known and hidden, of the Underground Railroad.
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