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Fateful Harvest: The True Story of a Small Town, a Global Industry, and a Toxic Secret [Paperback]

Duff Wilson
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Oct 3 2002
I see soil in a new light, and I wonder about my own lawn and garden. What have I sprinkled on my backyard? Is somebody using my home, my food, to recycle toxic waste? It seems unbelievable, outlandish -- but what if it's true?

A riveting exposÉ, Fateful Harvest tells the story of Patty Martin -- the mayor of a small Washington town called Quincy -- who discovers American industries are dumping toxic waste into farmers' fields and home gardens by labeling it "fertilizer." She becomes outraged at the failed crops, sick horses, and rare diseases in her town, as well as the threats to her children's health. Yet, when she blows the whistle on a nationwide problem, Patty Martin is nearly run out of town.

Duff Wilson, whose Seattle Times series on this story was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, provides the definitive account of a new and alarming environmental scandal. Fateful Harvest is a gripping study of corruption and courage, of recklessness and reckoning. It is a story that speaks to the greatest fears -- and ultimate hope -- in us all.


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From Amazon

The basis for Duff Wilson's Fateful Harvest was formed from his Pulitzer Prize nominated series "Fear in the Fields--How Hazardous Wastes Become Fertilizer". Arsenic, cadmium, lead and beryllium are industrial by-products so toxic it is illegal to dump them into the air or water. Yet, through a loophole in "the crazy semantics of waste disposal", these same hazardous wastes are being applied to the food we eat. And until a small-town mayor from a farming community in Washington state became suspicious, nobody knew. Mayor Patty Martin is a whistle blower as extraordinary as Karen Silkwood and Erin Brockovich--smart, persistent and courageous and overwhelmingly dedicated to her cause even when the town that elected her turned against her. Martin's obsession with hazardous waste in fertilizer began when she met Dennis DeYoung, a local farmer whose land was rendered infertile after the Cenex/Land o' Lakes company paid him to spread the residue from their fertiliser rinse pond on his land. But there was more than fertiliser residue there--it was a witch's brew of hazardous metals, cancer-causing chemicals and even radioactive materials that hadn't been produced by the company itself. DeYoung and Martin wanted to know how they got there and why.

While the articles prompted a modicum of action in Washington state and elsewhere, complacency allows the practice to continue even now. Expanded into book form, this impassioned expose about an alarming trend takes on even more power as Wilson and Martin ask questions the Environmental Protection Agency has been unwilling to answer: Why should there be a limit on the amount of lead in paint and dioxin in cement but not in the fertiliser spread over farmlands and gardens? And is there a correlation between the widespread use of toxins in fertilisers and the phenomenal rise in childhood illnesses and cancers since the early 1980s? --Lesley Reed --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

In this alarming, real-life version of Ibsen's An Enemy of the People, Patty Martin, a housewife, mother of four and mayor of the small farming town of Quincy, Wash., began to notice a pattern of failing crops, infertile topsoil and rare diseases in her community in the early 1990s. When she asked tough questions about the pattern, she received evasions and resistance from some local businesses and farmers, which only made her dig deeper. Martin found that a product manufactured with sludge from a waste pond in town, sold as fertilizer and spread on local farms, stunted crops, destroyed quality topsoil and left high concentrations of such heavy metals as cadmium, chromium and beryllium not usually present in fertilizers. As Martin pursued links between fertilizers, hazardous waste and public health risks, she, like Ibsen's protagonist, became increasingly unpopular in the town she was trying to protect. Growing beyond the conflict in Quincy, Wilson's investigation (which led to a 1997 series of articles that were nominated for Pulitzer Prize consideration) revealed that under prevailing state and federal laws, polluting industries throughout the U.S. saved millions of dollars by sending hazardous waste to fertilizer makers who in turn recycled the toxic chemicals into a product sold to farmers and consumers without disclosing what was in it. In the resulting outcry, Washington State became the first to insist that fertilizer companies provide detailed chemical analyses of their products. Wilson's copious reporting and Patty Wilson's example make a convincing case for a national policy on hazardous materials recycling. Agent, Elizabeth Wales. (Sept. 13) Forecast: This lucid presentation of the facts will stir the passions of readers already concerned about environmental issues, but those accustomed to more gut-wrenching accounts of similar transgressions, like A Civil Action and the film Erin Brockovich, won't be drawn in as easily.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
ONE NIGHT A DECADE EARLIER, as farm families were settling down in homes set back from the highway, Patty Martin drove across the bridge spanning the Columbia River and up to the plateau leading to the Quincy Valley. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book and about time May 9 2003
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
When this book talks about how the effects of heavy metals are not seen right away, I know this to be very true. Look at the autism epidemic and look at the amount of heavy metals that are in these autistic children. They don't just have too much mercury, they also are showing excessive levels of lead, arsenic, antimony, aluminum, etc. So is this how the effects of hazardous waste in fertilizer are showing up?
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4.0 out of 5 stars Nowhere to turn. Dec 10 2002
Format:Paperback
"Fateful Harvest" was easy to read but the facts presented left me outraged and saddened. Read the book and learn of the magic trick of turning toxic waste with costly disposal fees into a product to sell, fertilizer. Fertilizer which is laced with heavy metals that will end up in our food in increasing amounts as the accumulation in the soil increases. Learn how the average citizen, small town mayor and farmer have zero ability to impact business practices which are supported by the government despite years of heroic effort and the expose of this book. Despite minimal cosmetic changes, the practice goes on, and is apparently unstoppable, leaving nowhere to turn.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent July 7 2002
Format:Hardcover
This book is excellent. Everyone should read it and find out what is in our food.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars POWERFUL!
It is simple. Read the book. Decide if you want to eat your food with some toxic fertilizer sprinkled on by corporate-terrorists. Read more
Published on May 27 2002 by Barbara
5.0 out of 5 stars How hazardous waste is turned into fertilizer
Duff Wilson is an investigative reporter for the Seattle Times who got a call one day from Patty Martin, mayor of Quincy, Washington, who told him an almost unbelievable tale of... Read more
Published on May 3 2002 by Dennis Littrell
5.0 out of 5 stars Fateful Meeting
My eyes raced through Duff Wilson's "Fateful Harvest" spotting characters I know from an issue with which I have been acquainted for some time. Read more
Published on April 1 2002 by Tom Kruzen
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't eat my dirt
This is a story of how mining and manufacturing companies have successfully lobbied to and succeeded in poisoning croplands with their toxic wastes. Read more
Published on Feb 19 2002
5.0 out of 5 stars Yum, toxic waste for lunch
  The author acts as a filter for dozens of libelous ideas that Mayor Patty Martin presents based on her monitoring of local farmers and fertilizer companies. Read more
Published on Feb 9 2002
5.0 out of 5 stars Get Ready to be Appalled
This book is horrifying. You will not want to believe what goes into fertilizer (radioactive materials, lead, and poison to name a few "ingrediants")! Read more
Published on Feb 9 2002 by Marifrances
5.0 out of 5 stars Would you like fries with that?
A thoughtfully written book which documents the plight of small-town citizens turned activists who struggle to expose the horrifying industry practice of dumping toxic waste in our... Read more
Published on Dec 31 2001 by Sue Evans
5.0 out of 5 stars THE TRUTH HURTS; "FATEFUL HARVEST" UNVEILS THE TRUTH!
In this fast moving information age, we have become used to hearing of environmental controversies only when it is convenient for the media. Read more
Published on Nov 14 2001 by cocoproducer
1.0 out of 5 stars Entertainment for the uninformed public - no facts needed
Duff Wilson can create a drama, and can paint the "good vs evil" scenario very well, and develop and animate characters. Read more
Published on Oct 17 2001
1.0 out of 5 stars A sad book
I was just getting into Fateful Harvest when September 11th hit. I had to force myself to finish reading, because suddenly the book's theme seemed so trivial and self-righteous. Read more
Published on Sep 27 2001 by Cher Wildered
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