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The drowning of money island : a forgotten community's fight against the rising seas threatening coastal America / Andrew S. Lewis.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Boston : Beacon Press, [2019]Description: xv, 213 pages : maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780807083581
  • 0807083585
Subject(s):
Contents:
Part one: The storm. "Our American dream" -- "Where poor people came to get away" -- "Thus far, and no farther shalt thou go" -- "The next least liked" -- "We know not what a day may bring forth." -- Part two: No retreat. "Drain the swamp." -- "Hey man, that's cool." -- "The window is getting smaller." -- "Save the bay." -- Part three: Resilience. "I know where it is and will always return." -- "Aren't we a part of this?" -- "Tree City USA" -- "I'm just a dumb fisherman." -- "I think it's the bugs." -- "We have gobs of plans." -- "This view, we shall see, persists." -- "Build your wings on the way down."
Summary: "The Drowning of Money Island tells the story of a journalist's return to a hometown ravaged by Superstorm Sandy, where lack of recovery, sea level rise, and a state effort to buy out and demolish neighborhoods has fractured the community and foreshadowed coastal America's sinking future"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 974.994 L673 Available 33111009533262
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Offers a glimpse of the future of vanishing shorelines in America in the age of climate change, where the wealthy will be able to remain the longest while the poor will be forced to leave.

Journalist Andrew Lewis chronicles the struggle of his New Jersey hometown to rebuild their ravaged homes in the face of the same environmental stresses and governmental neglect that are endangering coastal areas throughout the United States. Lewis grew up on the Bayshore, a 40-mile stretch of Delaware Bay beaches, marshland, and fishing hamlets at the southern end of New Jersey, whose working-class community is fighting to retain their place in a country that has left them behind. The Bayshore, like so many rural places in the US, is under immense pressure from a combination of severe economic decline, industry loss, and regulation. But it is also contending with one of the fastest rates of sea level rise on the planet and the aftereffects of one of the most destructive hurricanes in American history, Superstorm Sandy. If in the years prior to Sandy the Bayshore had already been slowly disappearing, its beaches eroding and lowland cedar woods hollowing out into saltwater-bleached ghost forests, after the hurricane, the community was decimated. Today, homes and roads and memories are crumbling into the rising bay.

Cumberland, the poor, rural county where the Bayshore is located, had been left out of the bulk of the initial federal disaster relief package post-Sandy. Instead of money to rebuild, the Bayshore got the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Superstorm Sandy Blue Acres Program, which identified and purchased flood-prone neighborhoods where working-class citizens lived, then demolished them to be converted to open space.

The Drowning of Money Island is an intimate yet unbiased, lyrical yet investigative portrait of a rural community ravaged by sea level rise and economic hardship, as well as the increasingly divisive politics those factors have helped spawn. It invites us to confront how climate change is already intensifying preexisting inequality.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-204) and index.

"The Drowning of Money Island tells the story of a journalist's return to a hometown ravaged by Superstorm Sandy, where lack of recovery, sea level rise, and a state effort to buy out and demolish neighborhoods has fractured the community and foreshadowed coastal America's sinking future"-- Provided by publisher.

Part one: The storm. "Our American dream" -- "Where poor people came to get away" -- "Thus far, and no farther shalt thou go" -- "The next least liked" -- "We know not what a day may bring forth." -- Part two: No retreat. "Drain the swamp." -- "Hey man, that's cool." -- "The window is getting smaller." -- "Save the bay." -- Part three: Resilience. "I know where it is and will always return." -- "Aren't we a part of this?" -- "Tree City USA" -- "I'm just a dumb fisherman." -- "I think it's the bugs." -- "We have gobs of plans." -- "This view, we shall see, persists." -- "Build your wings on the way down."

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