The Devil's Element: Phosphorus and a World Out of Balance
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- $25.99
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- $25.99
Publisher Description
A New Yorker Best Book of 2023 • A Smithsonian Staff Favorite of 2023
The New York Times best-selling author on the source of great bounty—and now great peril—all over the world.
Phosphorus has played a critical role in some of the most lethal substances on earth: firebombs, rat poison, nerve gas. But it’s also the key component of one of the most vital: fertilizer, which has sustained life for billions of people. In this major work of explanatory science and environmental journalism, Pulitzer Prize finalist Dan Egan investigates the past, present, and future of what has been called “the oil of our time.”
The story of phosphorus spans the globe and vast tracts of human history. First discovered in a seventeenth-century alchemy lab in Hamburg, it soon became a highly sought-after resource. The race to mine phosphorus took people from the battlefields of Waterloo, which were looted for the bones of fallen soldiers, to the fabled guano islands off Peru, the Bone Valley of Florida, and the sand dunes of the Western Sahara. Over the past century, phosphorus has made farming vastly more productive, feeding the enormous increase in the human population. Yet, as Egan harrowingly reports, our overreliance on this vital crop nutrient is today causing toxic algae blooms and “dead zones” in waterways from the coasts of Florida to the Mississippi River basin to the Great Lakes and beyond. Egan also explores the alarming reality that diminishing access to phosphorus poses a threat to the food system worldwide—which risks rising conflict and even war.
With The Devil’s Element, Egan has written an essential and eye-opening account that urges us to pay attention to one of the most perilous but little-known environmental issues of our time.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
You might not think a book about phosphorus would be a pageturner, but that’s exactly what author Dan Egan delivers in his stunning look at the tricky chemical element. He starts by laying out phosphorus’ checkered past, with a tour of its uses in everything from bombs to water softeners. Next, Egan digs into the world’s increasing overreliance on the limited resource to produce fertilizer for modern crops and the destruction left in the mineral’s wake, like the toxic algae that sprout up in waters touched by phosphorus runoff or leaks. But this isn’t just an environmental horror story. Egan fills his book with humor and levity, not to mention some optimism about how we could handle phosphorus differently in the future. The Devil’s Element is a wildly compelling read.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Egan (The Death and Life of the Great Lakes) delivers a cautionary history of the mineral phosphorous. He emphasizes its importance to the natural world and human societies, tracing its discovery to 17th-century alchemist Hennig Brandt, who distilled phosphorous from urine and capitalized on its "otherworldly" glow to sell it as a novelty. Because phosphorus is essential to soil, 19th-century British agriculturalists took advantage of bones' high phosphorous content and established "bone-crushing mills" where soldiers' skeletons were made into fertilizer. Later in the century, phosphorous mining grew into a ravenous industry whose operations across the globe endangered many Indigenous Pacific islanders and ignited a bloody conflict on the Western Sahara. Today, Egan notes, the overuse of phosphorous drives such environmental catastrophes as toxic algae blooms. Though phosphorous is deadly in its elemental form—British bombs dropped on Hamburg in 1943 were "packed with phosphorous"—the mineral is also crucial to the functions of cells, DNA, and photosynthesis. The dark history highlights the element's overlooked centrality to human life, and Egan makes sure to counterbalance his warnings of phosphorus overuse with strategies to cope with potential shortages, including "aggressively" recycling manure. This will ignite readers' curiosity.