In the late 1970s Chip Ward and his wife left the Sleeping Rainbow Ranch in Capitol Reef National Park to raise their children in the classic small-town American setting of Grantsville, Utah. There, on the edge of the Great Basin Desert, disturbing tales of local sickness and death interrupted an idyllic life. A seven-year quest to understand a hidden history of ecocide followed. Canaries on the Rim is Ward’s firsthand account of that quest and how lessons learned in the wilderness were later applied to building opposition to toxic waste disposal, chemical weapons incineration, industrial pollution, and nuclear waste storage. The secret holocaust that is unfolding along the toxic shadow of America’s Great Basin Desert is grim, but Ward’s colorful and often-humorous story is not. Canaries on the Rim is a warning and a call to arms, but it is also a compelling drama and a lively primer on environmental activism. If civil action took place in Edward Abbey’s West, this is the book that would result.
Great starting point on the legacy of downwinders and how it relates to us all. It's not high art, but if effectively communicated the stakes and consequences.
This book was an eye-opener and is probably a must-read for anybody who lives in Utah, had family who were downwinders or who is interested in the ecology of Utah and our impact on it. Really, really good stuff.
I’ll address the weaknesses up front: his writing wasn’t super strong, and as others have mentioned, his source game was not good.
So why four stars? As an instruction manual for community activism, this book was top notch. Lessons from Ward are concrete and usable.
It was doubly relevant to me as a Utah citizen whose mother and two aunts have, perhaps not coincidentally, all had thyroid cancer after living 50 miles from massive disposal of military weapons and corporate chemicals.
The book is very poorly written. The prose is terrible, the little vignettes that come up through the book are usually cheesy, if not obnoxious. The overall feeling I got throughout these sections was “yeah, that happened 🙄”
Still, the environmental elements are well needed and well put. I just think that you would be better off (if you have the attention span) just reading a few news or journal articles. You’d get the same amount of information, without this sort of faux romanticism.
This year, I have been learning about organizations like Save Our Great Salt Lake and Friends of Great Salt Lake to better understand what it means to live downwind in our Anthropocene era. Ward’s account of his activism is by no means comprehensive, but it is clear how committed HEAL Utah and affiliated organizations are to environmental justice. I would definitely recommend Ward’s account to fans of Edward Abbey and scientists/politicians intrigued by environmental issues.
Could have been written better but a good book. Anyone that lives in Utah needs to read this. Keeping industry around that is literally killing us is not the answer to keeping Utah's industry strong. Especially now.
I can’t think too hard about the things I learned in this book or I will spiral. An amazing message that really needs to be heard - I wish it was a little more digestible for regular old folks like myself. This is my home… crap.
This book was fascinating to me because I was in grad school in Utah when the Skull Valley Goshute nuclear waste facility was being hotly debated, and some of the older members of my wife's family are downwinders. Chip Ward writes well, and his ability to turn a phrase and tell an interesting story will carry you quickly through this short book. Ward's work in environmental activism is to be admired, and his passion is evident.
That said, the book's earlier chapters are stronger than the later ones, where the narrative begins to get threadbare in places, and Ward is more inclined pontificate than educate. The book should be taken as an activist's memoir, not a thorough treatment on any of the topics. Facts and figures are woven in without sources, and there is no external material cited. This is understandable in that the book is presented as a story to be heard, not a collection of issues to be debated.
My school made each of us read this book over the summer so I came at it with a negative prejudice. Still, its not very interesting and a bit too technical and acronymy at times. It does have some of the best chapter titles I've ever read and of course an excellent message about the environmental ignorance and degradation going on in Utah's West Desert. Chip Ward, the author never really seems to be able to concentrate on his topic and the chapters ramble on on different paths for a while until they suddenly return to the subject in the last paragraph. Also, he doesn't provide any solutions really. Mostly its a complaining book about pollution and failure to control it.
If you live in Utah or the West, you must read this book. Chip Ward has pro-actively advocated that political complacency is not an option if it involves Utah economic revenue vs. the health and well-being of you, your family, and neighbors. The statement that we all live downwind is echoed eloquently by this author.
Important information on the environmental issues in Utah and when the author was presenting straight facts I really enjoyed it. When he morphed into his opinions I was completely turned off. By the end of the book I felt like I was reading his own rah-rah-rahs for all the "great" work he himself has done.