The gripping story of the most important overlooked commodity in the world-sand-and the crucial role it plays in our lives.
Vince Beiseris an award-winning journalist.The World in a Grain, his first book, was a finalist for the PEN/E. O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award and a California Book Award. His work has appeared inWired, Harper's, The Atlantic, Mother Jones, and the New York Times,among other publications.A graduate of the University of California at Berkeley, he lives in Los Angeles.
“A riveting story.” —Scientific American
“[An] impassioned and alarming report on sand.... In Beiser's
artful telling, the planet is caught up in a vicious, sand-fueled
cycle.” —Washington Post
“Beiser peppers research with first-person interviews in an
engaging and nuanced introduction to the ways sand has shaped the
world.... stunning.” —NPR
“Beiser’s eye-opening study clarifies the science and the huge role
of sand in heavy and high-tech industry. Perhaps most compelling is
his exposé of sand mining, which obliterates islands, destroys
coral reefs and marine biodiversity, and threatens livelihoods. A
powerful lens on an under-reported environmental crisis.”
—Nature
“Whether in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, or India, [Beiser] exhibits
a flare for detailing the human drama through prose.” —Los Angeles
Review of Books
“I thought I knew the basics of sustainability, but this lucid,
eye-opening book made me feel like a dolt in the best possible
aha-moment way: I'd simply never registered how much of the
contemporary world—our concrete and glass buildings and asphalt
roads and silicone-based digital devices and so much more—is
entirely, voraciously sand-dependent. And the looming global
sand crisis: who knew?” —Kurt Andersen, author of Fantasyland:
How America Went Haywire: A 500-Year History
“A fresh history of 'the most important solid substance on Earth,
the literal foundation of modern civilization.' Books on a single,
familiar topic (salt, cod, etc.) have an eager audience, and
readers will find this an entirely satisfying addition to the
genre.” —Kirkus Reviews
“The book is at its urgent best in chapters on the black market in
sand and the sand mafias that brutally exercise control over
resources... Breezily written and with insights on every page, this
is an eye-opening look at a resource too often taken for granted.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A rich study of one of the world's most abundant natural
resources: sand. With a balance of statistics, science, history,
on-the-scene reporting and some healthy environmental skepticism,
The World in a Grain highlights the ways this ubiquitous global
commodity has been essential to human development and advancement.”
—Shelf Awareness
“The World in a Grain is nothing less than one of the best
reporters working today unpacking the literal foundations of
civilization. Everything we are, everywhere we live, is built on or
out of sand, and Vince Beiser tells the best story of where that
sand comes from, who moves it, and what they build from it. It's a
whole new way of seeing the world.” —Adam Rogers, author of Proof:
The Science of Booze
“Modern life, as Vince Beiser compellingly explains, is literally
made of sand. Yet we have been so profligate with this seemingly
inexhaustible resource that for many uses in many parts of the
world we are running out. The World in a Grain is a chronicle of
innovation and greed and heedless waste—in brief, the story of
civilization.” —David Owen, author of Where the Water Goes
“A riveting, wonderfully written investigation into the many kinds
of castles the world has built out of sand. You'll find something
new, and something fascinating, on every page. Perhaps even in
every paragraph.” —Nicholas Thompson, author of The Hawk and the
Dove
“Sand shortage? Black market in sand? Secret sand heists? Who knew?
I certainly didn’t before reading this lively and eye-opening book
about a material I’d always assumed almost infinite. Vince Beiser
shows, with great skill, that this key component of our fragile,
over-consuming planet we need to better understand, conserve and
protect.” —Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopold’s Ghost and Bury
the Chains
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