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Philip L. Fradkin

Magnitude 8

Earthquakes and Life along the San Andreas Fault

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$25.95, £17.95 paperback

9780520221192

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348 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 1 map, 1 b/w photograph
October 1999, Available worldwide
Also in: California & The West: Natural History; Natural History: Earth
Environmental historian Philip L. Fradkin offers a vivid history of earthquakes and an eloquent guide to the San Andreas Fault, the seismic scar that bisects the Golden State's spectacular scenery. The author includes dramatic stories of legendary earthquakes elsewhere: in New York, New England, the central Mississippi River Valley, Europe, and the Far East. Combining human and natural dramas, he places the reader at the epicenter of the most invisible, unpredictable, and feared of the earth's violent phenomena. On the eve of the millennium, as cyberspace crackles with apocalyptic visions, Fradkin reaches beyond the earthshaking moment to examine the mythology, culture, social implications, politics, and science of earthquakes.
"His proximity to one of the most turbulent faults in the United States informs his discussion of the natural elements of earthquakes and the impact of this phenomenon on the cultural and daily lives of the people who reside near faults."—Science News

"A fascinating and at times riveting yarn about one of the state's—and the earth's—most powerful and mysterious forces. . . . [Fradkin] puts California's seismic adventure in context by tracing the history, mythology and literature of earthquakes worldwide, peppering his account with quake references by Shakespeare, Voltaire and the Yurok Indians of the Northwest."—Jim Doyle, San Francisco Chronicle Book Review
"This superb cautionary tale should be required reading for every Californian. (And smug New Yorkers will be shocked by Fradkin's surprising account of their own seismic vulnerability.)"—Mike Davis, author of City of Quartz
Philip L. Fradkin is the author of six acclaimed books on the American West, including The Seven States of California (California, 1997) and A River No More (California, 1996). He shared a Pulitzer Prize as a journalist, served as assistant secretary in the state agency responsible for overseeing seismic matters, and for the last twenty years has lived adjacent to the San Andreas Fault in California's Marin County.
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