A River Lost : The Life and Death of the Columbia

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Author: Blaine Harden

ISBN-10: 0393316904

ISBN-13: 9780393316902

Category: General & Miscellaneous Biography

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"A River Lost is superbly reported and written with clarity, insight, and great skill."—Washington Post Book World Publishers Weekly Although shorter than the Mississippi, the Columbia River, on the border between Washington and Oregon, is many times more powerful. Its energy comes from its steepness-it falls twice as far as the Mississippi in half the distance, and is what so attracted government engineers interested in producing hydroelectric power. Numerous dams, including Grand Coulee, "larger than any structure ever built in world history," transformed the river into a huge, navigable lake making Lewiston, Idaho, an unlikely seaport. "The river was killed more than sixty years ago and was reborn as plumbing." Washington Post journalist Harden goes back to his boyhood home (Moses Lake, Wash.) and examines the changes-sociological, environmental, economic and aesthetic-that the taming of this great river wrought. His wonderful account touches on the destruction of Native American cultures dependent on the river and its salmon, and on the near extinction of the salmon themselves. Also fairly portrayed are the people and industries currently dependent on both the managed river and massive government subsidies: the nuclear industry, commercial barge traffic and desert farmers irrigating with the river's water. Harden provides a sensitive and thoughtful examination of a complex situation. (May)

INTRODUCTION11 1: Slackwater 23 2: Better Off Underwater44 3: Machine River58 4: The Biggest Thing on Earth77 5: The Flood100 6: Ditches from Heaven117 7: A Noble Way to Use a River135 8: Wild and Scenic Atomic River147 9: Born with No Hips174 10: Slackwater II185 11: The River Game213 Epilogue239 Notes247 Acknowledgments257 Index259