By now we know that fracking isn't all it's cracked up to be (no pun intended). The residents of Bakerton discover that there aren't jobs for locals even if the bars are full and crime is up. More importantly, they were not ready for damage to the environment, polluted water, clear cut acres of land, traffic detours, damaged roads, light pollution, and ever-present noise. You’ll think twice about signing a lease, or living near a fracking (hydraulic fracturing) operation.
I liked the characters who were well fleshed out with lots of back story. But the back stories broke up the chronology and the flow of the story. Missing were descriptions of investigation into corporate corruption, dumping and toxic waste, and the threatened lawsuits. Then again, Haigh was focused on the race to drill and not the aftermath.
As I read Heat & Light, I kept thinking about other books and movies on the same topic. Promised Land with Matt Damon (2012) who plays a salesman for an oil & gas company
bidding for fracking leases http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2091473/. The movie is full of the rhetoric of the oil & gas company and their drive to lease all the land in any given county. Of course, there's a surprise ending to this movie.
Two quintessential titles on the topic of pollution by big corporation and investigating the damages are A Civil Action by Jonathan Harr (1996) which will drag you into the world of corporate corruption and hidden secrets just as the movie starring John Travolta the damages to humans damaged by toxic waste. And Erin Brockovich starring Julia Roberts (2000) http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0195685/ where the heroine investigates pollution and cancer digging into all types of records.
Ohio
author Carla Buckley's Invisible (2012) is about water pollution. Buckley is an environmental scientist and her books revolve around the environment going crazy.
One of Kate Wilhelm’s early books is Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang (1976), a dystopian novel about pollution and toxic fall out from nuclear waste. Her Barbara Holloway series also grapples with environmental pollution.
What review of environmental hazards, toxicity, and waste is complete without the ground breaking book by Rachel Carson Silent Spring (1962). More than fifty years old, the book still holds lessons for each generation.
Of course you could read more about fracking and oversight by the federal government and the EPA on their website https://www.epa.gov/hydraulicfracturing
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