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224 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2008
“And all the time, the inconvenient biology of human bodies creating logistical and law enforcement challenges for the communities that host the oil-field workers—food and porta-potties, beds and trailers, drugs and sex—because the humans involved in the process of oil drilling aren’t always robotic extensions of their drill bits”.Drawing the reader’s attention to these kinds of consequences is an essential component of this work, and one which this reader cannot ignore. Though potentially dangerous to the story if improperly handled and didactic, I find this particular type of consciousness-raising appropriate.
“By the time [he] climbed back into the pickup he was most definitely starting to lose higher functioning—his systems shutting down from hypothermia—and the way Jake tells it, Colton didn’t have an excess of higher functioning to lose in the first place”.One might assert a workplace mishap was inevitable, especially on a catwalk, with no rails, in high wind. But that doesn’t exonerate the drilling company, Patterson-UTI in this case.
“It had turned cold the day Colton drove up to Casper in the heart of Wyoming’s oil and gas country, fall laid a frigid breath over the filtered sun. It was the hunting season of Colton’s twenty-third year and the scented wind off the mountains and the bittersweet smell of turning aspen leaves made him itch to be up at the snowline tracking elk into the deadfall”.


