The Water Thieves

Author: Sam Mahon

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $35.00 NZD
  • : 9781877361517
  • : Random House New Zealand
  • : Longacre Press
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  • : September 2006
  • : New Zealand
  • : 24.99
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  • : books

Special Fields

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  • : Sam Mahon
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  • : Paperback
  • :
  • :
  • : en
  • : 333.729101
  • :
  • : 192
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  • : Photo section
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Barcode 9781877361517
9781877361517

Description

The Water Thieves is a passionate and engaging account of a year in the author's life. Galvanised into action by the realisation that the wetlands and streams all around him have begun to wither, Sam Mahon embarks on a year of involvement in local body politics. This memoir charts the frustrations, relationships, and confl icts, as well as the need for wild invention when he agrees to run for Council. Mahon's descriptions of the natural world rival those from our best poets. Yet when he describes the real nuts and bolts of politics: council meetings, memos, phone trees, protests, working with fellow environmentalists, he's also a comically disarming and often blistering, social satirist. His energy for sustaining a fi ght in the face of maddening obstruction is prodigious. Mahon's techniques for gaining councillor and media attention are hilarious, bloody-minded and bold: from pyrotechnics to mock funerals; from stabbingly witty speeches to asking those in power to put their politics where their immediate health is, demonstrates all the qualities of the fi rebrand. This memoir is poetry, expose, elegy, Shakespearean comedy, drama and protest song. Mahon weaves the world of the artist and the world of the environmental activist with skill and immediacy. His comments on human nature, including his own, makes for some hilarious, and sobering, moments. The Water Thieves is an astonishing and intensely interesting account concerning one of our most valuable natural resources. It is skilfully and passionately written with an individual and honest voice: a new voice in the literary non-fi ction genre of memoir.

Author description

SAM MAHON lives in North Canterbury in a reconstructed flour mill. It's here where he works as a sculptor, printmaker, painter and writer. He takes great delight in designing kinetic sculptures, musical instruments and miniature rockets. He's a keen pyrotechnician and a superb draughtsman. Sam is the son of the late Justice Peter Mahon, known for the Erebus Inquiry and for his book, Dear Sam, which comprises of letters to his son. Sam Mahon's fi rst book The Year of the Horse was awarded the Best First Book Award for non-fi ction in 2003.