
Lost Mountain is a groundbreaking work of
literary nonfiction that exposes how radical strip mining is destroying
one of America's most precious natural resources and the communities that
depend on it.
The mountains of Appalachia are home to one of the great
forests of the world-they predate the Ice Age and scientists refer to them
as the "rainforests" of North America for their remarkable density
and species diversity. These mountains also hold the mother lode of American
coal, and the coalmining industry has long been the economic backbone for
families in a region hard-pressed for other job opportunities. But recently,
a new type of mining has been introduced-"radical strip mining,"
aka "mountaintop removal"-in which a team employing no more than
ten men and some heavy machinery literally blast off the top of a mountain,
dump it in the valley below, and scoop out the coal.
Erik Reece chronicles the year he spent witnessing the systematic
decimation of a single mountain, aptly named "Lost Mountain."
A native Kentuckian and the son of a coal worker, Reece makes it clear that
strip mining is neither a local concern nor a radical contention, but a
mainstream crisis that encompasses every hot-button issue-from corporate
hubris and government neglect, to class conflict and poisoned groundwater,
to irrevocable species extinction and landscape destruction. Published excerpts
of Lost Mountain are already driving headlines and legislative action in
Kentucky.
In Erik Reece, the mountains of Kentucky have found an eloquent and powerful spokesman in the tradition of Edward Abbey, Rachel Carson, Aldo Leopold, and Henry David Thoreau. Like the work of those writers before him, Lost Mountain will stand as a landmark defense of a natural treasure-and a core part of our national identity-on the verge of extinction, and as the introduction of a mighty new literary voice.







