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Oil on the Brain by Lisa Margonelli
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Oil on the Brain

Best Seller
Oil on the Brain by Lisa Margonelli
Paperback $16.00
Feb 12, 2008 | ISBN 9780767916974

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  • $16.00

    Feb 12, 2008 | ISBN 9780767916974

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  • Jan 30, 2007 | ISBN 9780385520058

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Product Details

Praise

“If you drive a car, you must read this book.” —Mary Roach, author of Stiff

“By giving voice to the people who are the links in the global oil chain, Margonelli invites us to leapfrog all the rhetoric, dry statistics, and dire pronouncements about oil in order to truly understand it.” —Fast Company

“Hugely enjoyable, compulsively readable, and brilliantly reported.” —Po Bronson, author of What Should I Do with My Life?

“From the corner gas station to the oil fields of Nigeria, there couldn’t be a better traveling companion than Margonelli. She’s fast, fearless, funny, and a brilliant observer.”
—Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed

Awards

New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age WINNER 2008

Author Q&A

What made you decide to write about oil? I covered Saddam’s birthday party in Iraq in 2001, and it was obvious that the culture, Saddam – everything was enabled by oil. Then I had another assignment from a small [Native American] village in the far north of Alaska that had been protesting development there. They saw themselves as fighting not only oil development but oil culture. I realized how little I knew about oil, yet how much my life was entangled with it. Oil is almost always covered on the business pages, but I wanted to find this other story – the story you wouldn’t expect to find. Oil is such a complex subject; how did you know where to begin? Once I decided to start at the gas station – with a portrait of consumership – it all made sense. You have to understand why consumers act the way they do, and how they defy textbook economic rationality, to understand the kinds of cartwheels the rest of the system does. What will it take for us to consume less gas? Things outside the country are going to cause the price to rise. And the ways we had of keeping prices low are basically falling apart. Inside the country, I don’t think the issue is one person driving an SUV. It’s a very wide change that needs to happen. Since the 1930s, the government has set out to assure supply. What we really need to do is address demand and limit it in ways that are good for our economy. Lots of people think high gas prices are a price-gouging conspiracy by big oil companies, but you advocate looking at the big picture. What does that mean? We’re facing big issues that will need complicated solutions. In China, bureaucrats are thinking about the next hundred years, and we’ve essentially outsourced that planning to the oil companies. So we need to start thinking about how we are going to insulate ourselves against environmental and economic catastrophe. Then, on an existential level, we need to say, "our destiny is essentially in our hands." But to really start making long-term plans and start thinking strategically about how we’re going to do this, we need to bring the oil companies to the table.(Originally published in Publishers Weekly)

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