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The Crazies

The Cattleman, the Wind Prospector, and a War Out West

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A dazzling piece of narrative nonfiction about land lust and the American West, The Crazies tells the story of a wind farm that triggers a 21st century range war between a struggling fifth-generation rancher and the billionaires next door.
Most locals in Big Timber, Montana learn to live with the wind. Rick Jarrett sought his fortune in it. Like his pioneer ancestors who staked their claims in the Treasure State, he believed in his right to make a living off the land—and its newest precious resource, million-dollar wind.

Trouble was, Jarrett's neighbors were some of the wealthiest and most influential men in America, trophy ranchers who'd come West to enjoy magnificent mountain views, not stare at 500-foot wind turbines.

And so began an epic showdown that would pull in an ever-widening cast of larger-than-life characters, including a Texas oil and gas tycoon, a roguish wind prospector, a Crow activist fighting for his tribe's rights to the mountains they hold sacred, and an Olympic athlete-turned-attorney whose path to redemption would lead to Jarrett's wind farm. A wildly entertaining yarn, the brawl over Crazy Mountain Wind would become a fight over the values that define us as Americans—and a window into how this country actually works. All the while, the most coveted rangeland in the West was being threatened by forces more powerful than anything one man could muster: dwindling snowpack, record drought, raging wildfires.

The Crazies is a Western for a warming planet, full of cowboys and billionaires and billionaire cowboys. But it's also so much more. It's an exquisitely reported, ruggedly beautiful elegy for a vanishing way of life and a bighearted inquiry into how you can love a place so much you risk destroying it.
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    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2024
      How a proposed wind farm set off epic struggles on one of America's new frontiers. This account of a modern land battle in the American West, told dramatically in the form of narrative nonfiction, explores "a story centuries in the making, with millionaires and billionaires, cattle barons and Crow warriors, prospectors and politicians, meat-packers and medicine men." A coveted region of Montana stands at the center of the complex disputes described here, with competing factions pursuing sometimes incompatible aims: developing wind power, securing ancestral tribal rights, or reserving the picturesque landscape for private and commercial interests. The various scenes that play out suggest a reiteration of the nation's frontier history, with lax regulation of aggressive instincts and enormous disparities in power. The author's brisk, consistently engaging storytelling vividly sets forth the financial stakes involved for those who control the land and its energy potential and the cultural and personal stakes for those who seek to prolong traditional ways of life. We gain a memorable sense, at last, of what this territory has meant to its Indigenous inhabitants as well as waves of settlers in the Montana region. A major difference from the 19th century, as the book makes clear, is that this 21st-century Wild West faces an existential crisis as the climate warms and ecosystems threaten collapse. Old ideals about the inexhaustibility of the nation's resources must yield to new understandings of sustainability. An enormous expansion of wind farms in places such as this, Gamerman notes, will be essential for a successful transition to a clean energy future and the mitigation of harms produced by exploitative practices. This Western narrative is, she convincingly concludes, crucially relevant to the entire nation's fate. A dynamic, informed, absorbing exploration of literal and figurative power struggles.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 2, 2024
      A new kind of range war roils a small town in this intricate debut account. Wall Street Journal reporter Gamerman recaps a zoning and development controversy in the picturesque Crazy Mountains region near Big Timber, Mont. On one side were Rick Jarrett, a debt-saddled cattle rancher worried about losing his land, and Marty Wilde, a wildcat wind prospector trying to develop a wind farm on Jarrett’s property. Opposing them were billionaire oilman Russell Gordy and other wealthy ranch owners whose mountain vistas and property values would be compromised, they insisted, by having 500-foot-tall turbines nearby. The conflict led to lawsuits and a court showdown that spotlighted the muddled ideologies and class politics of renewable energy, with desperate but traditionalist ranch families haphazardly aligned with progressive environmentalists while squaring off against plutocratic NIMBYs—who championed pristine wilderness aesthetics over economic development, bemoaned the threat posed to eagles and bats by the turbine blades, and cited the potential human health risks of the whooshing noise and flickering shadows they produce. Gamerman’s lush prose evokes the imprint of the harsh, beautiful landscape on its more hard-bitten inhabitants. (“The wind was a steady force that was always working against you.... The wind was as much a part of Rick’s legacy as the land itself. People were buying wind? Well, goddammit, he had wind to sell.”) It’s a captivating saga.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2024
      When the setting is Montana's staggeringly scenic Crazy Mountains, the idea of any man-made change to the natural landscape will generate a case of NIMBY on steroids. Yet when two multigenerational ranchers with failing livestock enterprises decided to install income-generating windmills on their land, they found themselves and their supporters to be a few Davids going up against many Goliaths, including a Texas oil magnate, a high-powered Las Vegas attorney, and a Manhattan hedge-fund manager. Each had their own idea of legacy and ownership, conservation and exploitation. Did protecting eagles and elk trump private property rights? A longtime real-estate reporter for the Wall Street Journal, Gamerman has an expert's facility for navigating the myriad moving parts involved in seeking answers to the question of who has the right to develop resources on their own land. As she untangles the bureaucratic boondoggles and legal strategies, Gamerman demonstrates that it's a miracle that anything anywhere ever gets accomplished. Gamerman's battle of wits and will is as epic as the land itself.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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