![]() ![]() A graduate of the Columbia Journalism School, he lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has won the Oakes Award, the National Headliner Award, and the J. And he examines new risks, such as unsafe drinking water, the threat of water diversions, and “dead zones” that cover hundreds of square miles of water-while showing how the Great Lakes can be restored and preserved for generations to come.Ībout the author: Dan Egan, a reporter for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, has twice been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. ![]() He explains how invasive species such as Asian carp, sea lamprey, and zebra mussels have decimated native species and endanger the entire United States. Lawrence Seaway and the Chicago ship canal-good ideas in their time that have had horrendous consequences. ![]() In a work of narrative reporting in the vein of Rachel Carson and Elizabeth Kolbert, prize-winning reporter Dan Egan delivers an eye-opening portrait of our nation’s greatest natural resource as it faces ecological calamity. The author, Dan Egan, delves into key issues that have affected the ecology and politics of the Great. Yet they are under threat as never before. The book is a scientific analysis of the Great Lakes. ![]() The Great Lakes hold 20 percent of the world’s freshwater, and they provide food, work, and weekend fun for tens of millions of Americans. Dan Egan discusses "The Death and Life of the Great Lakes."Ībout the book: A master reporter’s landmark work of contemporary ecology. ![]()
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