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Summary
Summary
A private American consortium of corporate owners aims to pipe and ship water from northern Quebec to the US. Congressmen, state governors, and a federal administration hostile to Canada ride shotgun for them, aided by a brilliant, existentially torn Quebec deputy minister and a cut-throat minister of finance. They're resisted by a whistle-blowing executive, the director of a major US environmental organization, a group of Quebec ecologists, a feisty British journalist, three rogue policemen, a reluctant eco-terrorist, and a maverick Vermont governor hated by the consortium and the White House.
In an era during which water scarcity--"one of the major problems of the twenty-first century," according to the UN--becomes a very real proposition for much of the world, Water, Inc. is an exquisitely timed political thriller. With action sprawling across urban and rural America, into the cities and beautiful wilderness of Quebec, and as far as Mexico, Lisbon, London, and Brussels, it is a story of greed, heroism, clashing loyalties, love, hate, and mortal risk.
Reviews (2)
Kirkus Review
Canadian Burstyn (The Rites of Men, not reviewed), a public policy consultant, tenders a sharp tale of hydrological reengineering--the theft of water--in a prescient and illuminating thriller. What starts out as a leisurely piece of ecological skullduggery becomes more and more shivering through the sheer venality of corporate greedsters and governmental egomaniacs and the tactics they use to sate their avarice. It all has to do with water: good old H2O, without which life ceases and which in pure, copious quantities is becoming a rarer commodity day by day. And commodity is the catchword in Burstyn's cracking tale about privatized water resources for agriculture and industry and a $22-billion-a-year bottled-water industry (unregulated, Burstyn notes in one of his many handy environmental asides, so that the bottled stuff is often no safer or healthier than that from the tap). While Burstyn's characters may sometimes be cut from stock--the big-hearted detective in "a rumpled polyester suit, and a navy-and-red striped tie with a sizeable stain--ketchup?--right in the middle"; the archvillain who "intended to burn into history a legacy of economic brilliance, power, and control that far surpassed his father's"--the heroes are an appealing, disparate bunch, friends of the environment, wise to the ways of computer hacking, political chicanery, and industrial malarkey. Burstyn also works a good balance of humor (she has a couple of reporters named Brick and Dorcas, and her QuÉbecois environmental group is named Eau NO), romantic twinning, and dissolution, as well as some nasty murders of oppositionists. The story is also an easy-to-imbibe lesson in the politics of water (a world of hush-hush realpolitik malfeasance) and in the toothlessness of governmental protective measures ("Chapter 11. . . provides the grounds to judge environmental considerations as, quote unquote, impediments to business"). As water pollution has spiked, so has the global rise of water refugees. A flustering cautionary tale, the first in a trilogy, rolling with intrigue and suspense. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
While we wage war over oil, or black gold, an even more serious struggle is taking shape over blue gold, or freshwater, an essential and increasingly endangered resource. Canadian writer Burstyn dramatizes the high stakes involved in the battle for commercial control of big water in a smart, sexy, witty, and hard-hitting ecothriller. Diabolical, megawealthy William Greele has put together a consortium of fellow greedy CEOs to build a gargantuan pipeline to pump massive amounts of Quebec water to the thirsty U.S. Contemptuous of the concerns of environmentalists and confident that his minions have muzzled the press, Greele coerces a deputy minister into securing government approval. But Greele and his co-conspirators have grievously underestimated their valiant and resourceful foes, including a high-profile environmentalist, Claire Davidowicz; Serge's wife, Nicole, an expert on water pollutants; a bird-loving former air force officer turned whistleblower; an inspired hacker; and a brave and beautiful journalist. Alluring characters and a careening plot provide shivery pleasures as Burstyn orchestrates a galvanizing introduction to a looming global crisis. --Donna Seaman Copyright 2004 Booklist