Part 1: The History of Human Waste
Chapter 1: How I Learned to Love the Excrement
Chapter 2: The Early History of Human Excreta
Chapter 3: Treasure Night Soil as if It Were Gold!
Chapter 4: The Water Closet Dilemma and the Sewage Farm
Paradigm
Chapter 5: Germs, Fertilizer, and the Poop Police
Part 2: The Present: A Sludge Revolution in Progress
Chapter 6: The Great Sewage Time Bomb and the Redistribution of
Nutrients on the Planet
Chapter 7: Loowatt, a Loo That Turns Waste into Watts
Chapter 8: The Crap That Cooks Your Dinner and Container-Based
Sanitation
Chapter 9: HomeBiogas: Your Personal Digester in a Box
Chapter 10: Made in New York
Chapter 11: Lystek, the Home of Sewage Smoothies
Chapter 12: How DC Water Makes Biosolids BLOOM
Chapter 13: From Biosolids to Biofuels
Part 3: The Future of Medicine and Other Things
Chapter 14: Poop: The Best (and Cheapest) Medicine
Chapter 15: Looking where the Sun Doesn’t Shine
Chapter 16: From the Kindness of One’s Gut: An Insider Look into
Stool Banks
Afterword: Breathing Poetry into Poop
Notes
Index
Lina Zeldovich is a writer and editor specializing in the journalism of solutions. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Reader's Digest, Smithsonian, Popular Science, Scientific American, Atlantic, Newsweek, and many other popular outlets. An immigrant from the former Soviet Union, she lives in New York City and keeps a compost pile in her backyard.
"A take on waste that's anything but wasteful—it's a fascinating
dig into the history and science of handling human excrement. . . .
Equally remarkable are Zeldovich's sections on the development and
evolution of wastewater treatment plants. . . . Zeldovich is at
home with an awkward subject, making for a grossly engrossing and
vivid survey. Readers won't take the 'flush and forget' mindset for
granted again."
*Publishers Weekly*
"Zeldovich is an engaging writer. She loves puns and poop jokes.
(Who doesn't?) And her travels around the world are, in their own
scatological way, inspiring."
*New York Review of Books*
"It would be easy for a book that focuses on obstacles to improving
global sanitation, fixing the agricultural waste cycle, reducing
pollution, and improving health to resort to paralyzing gloom. The
Other Dark Matter does not shy from the enormity of the problems,
yet suggests solutions are achievable, at scales from individuals
to entire countries. Paced quickly with prose enlivened by the
author's on-location reporting and personal experiences, the book
is far from a grim slog through the world's sewers—it's more like
an exciting tour in a biogas-powered balloon."
*Undark*
"[An] original, necessary book."
*Nature*
"The Other Dark Matter does not shy from the enormity of the
problems, yet suggests solutions are achievable, at scales from
individuals to entire countries. Paced quickly with prose enlivened
by the author's on-location reporting and personal experiences, the
book is far from a grim slog through the world's sewers — it's more
like an exciting tour in a biogas-powered balloon."
*Salon*
"It's unusual to come across a book that makes you say, 'Oh, crap!'
in a good way."
*American Scientist*
“In bright and airy prose, she takes readers on a globe-spanning
trip to sites where fecal material is reprocessed and figuratively
turned into gold. . . . Readers should leave this book with a
renewed interest in sustainable systems to manage what we normally
put out of sight and out of mind."
*Natural History*
“It is unquestionably [a topic] that—given the ever-increasing
human population belaboring the planet—merits our attention if we
are, ecologically and sustainably speaking, to prevent finding
ourselves collectively up a famous creek without a propulsion
device. Ms. Zeldovich’s new book looks to be an excellent way to
introduce ourselves to it.”
*The Well-Read Naturalist*
"Given the growing scale of public engagement in sanitation, there
is a glut of books on the subject. Not all of them are readable,
not all of them are well researched. This one is. It takes the
technology questions further. It is an engaging read on a queasy
topic"
*Shaastra*
"In writing a primer on poop and its possibilities,
[Zeldovich] performs a much larger function: destigmatizing a
vital biological product that has long gotten a bum rap."
*Columbia Magazine*
"Some of the ideas in [the book] really feel like they could change
the world in a major way. . . . It's really excellent."
*Across the Margin*
"Even readers familiar with the history and ecology of waste
management will not be disappointed. . . . As detailed as it is
witty. . . . Given the growing scale of public engagement in
sanitation, there is a glut of books on the subject. Not all of
them are readable, not all of them are well researched. This one
is. It takes the technology questions further. It is an engaging
read on a queasy topic."
*Shaastra*
"Zeldovich provides a fascinating window into current attitudes
towards waste and reflects on the wide-ranging meanings and
practices associated with excreta. In doing so, she has written a
book which picks up wider trends in present research: the porosity
of the human body and its leakiness, the incomplete nature of
transitions across explanatory frameworks of disease, and the
rehabilitation of historic practices that might have transformative
potential in the future."
*British Journal for the History of Science*
"This is some good shit, people. Not only entertaining, but deeply
important. Everyone with a colon should read this book. Centuries
back, people knew the value of shit. In countries with poor soil,
human waste was like gold: people stole it, paid their rent with
it, and gave it as gifts. Today, keeping it out of our waterways is
our best hope for defusing what Zeldovich calls the Great Sewage
Time Bomb. She is an ideal guide to this ridiculously fascinating
world."
*Mary Roach, author of Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human
Cadavers*
"Zeldovich shows to dazzling effect how a famously difficult
subject—the often peculiar scientific history of human waste—can
become an engrossing tale. The story is enlightening, surprising,
occasionally enraging—and wholly worth your time."
*Deborah Blum, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Poison
Squad*
"Zeldovich shows that excrement can be useful, profitable, and
anything but waste, and does this with warmth, curiosity, and
humor. This book is a great companion should you wish to journey to
the rich and still underexposed world of shit (and you
should)."
*Rose George, author of The Big Necessity: The Unmentionable World
of Human Waste and Why It Matters*
"Here is an indispensable book about what we might call the
Anthro-poo-cene. Humanity's current collision course with nature
has everything to do with energy and how we abuse it—including the
human waste products of our metabolic bodies. This lively and
entertaining history is also full of innovative ways people are
finally dealing with their you-know-what."
*Mary Ellen Hannibal, author of Citizen Scientist: Searching for
Heroes and Hope in an Age of Extinction*
"Who knew our poop could be so fascinating and important? In her
brilliantly reported and written new book, Zeldovich shows that now
more than ever the health of humanity and the rest of nature
depends on how we handle 'the other dark matter.'"
*John Horgan, author of Pay Attention: Sex, Death, and Science*
"An intriguing, compelling, very human story of how a valuable
resource has been used and squandered, thrown away, and
rediscovered. It is a story of the people who, against a background
of mockery and disbelief, have developed creative, lucrative, and
ecologically viable options for reframing what many have seen as a
'problem' of 'waste disposal' into an opportunity for innovative
resource use. It will have wide appeal to all intelligent readers,
both within and well beyond academia."
*David Waltner-Toews, author of The Origin of Feces: What
Excrement Tells Us About Evolution, Ecology, and a Sustainable
Society*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |