Poisoning the well How forever chemicals contaminated America

Sharon Udasin

Book - 2025

"This is the shocking true-life story of how PFAS, a set of toxic chemicals most people have never heard of, poisoned the entire country. Based on original, shoe-leather reporting in four highly contaminated towns and damning documents from the polluters' own files, Poisoning the Well traces an ugly history of corporate greed and devastation of human lives. We learn that PFAS, the 'forever chemicals' found in everyday products, from cooking pans to mascara, are coursing through the veins of 97% of Americans."--

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  • Introduction. Forever and Everywhere
  • Chapter 1. A Glorious Future
  • Chapter 2. A Very Toxic Compound
  • Chapter 3. So Many Ailments
  • Chapter 4. All Settled?
  • Chapter 5. Miracle Foam
  • Chapter 6. Boots on the Ground
  • Chapter 7. Unqualified Immunity
  • Chapter 8. A Win-Win?
  • Chapter 9. First in the Nation
  • Chapter 10. A Premature Victory Dance
  • Chapter 11. The Next Generation
  • Chapter 12. Whac-A-Mole
  • Chapter 13. The Real Fix
  • Epilogue. "My life Won't Be in Vain"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Authors
Review by Booklist Review

They're called forever chemicals because they do not break down. Instead, they build up in water, air, earth, and the bodies of animals and humans. Nearly all of us have them in our blood, and for some, that means suffering from serious diseases that destroy lives, families, and communities. Environmental journalists Udasin and Frazin explain the science, properties, and uses of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, man-made chemicals numbering in the thousands and long unregulated. Known as PFAS and manufactured by 3M and Dupont among others, they're in nonstick cookware, stain- and water-resistant products, dental floss, clothing, toys, cosmetics, fire-fighting foam, and sludge made from industrial waste and used as fertilizer on croplands. Udasin and Frazin tell the heartbreaking stories of many individuals whose lives have been derailed by PFAS all across the country, beginning in Alabama with Brenda Hampton, who took action when she realized that she and her family and neighbors were caught in a relentless siege of cancer and kidney disease. In this detailed exposé of corporate evasiveness, inadequate governmental response, and determined lawyers and grassroots activists, the authors precisely elucidate environmental and health concerns, landmark court cases, and some hope for technologies that may eventually eradicate these poisons. An eye-opening chronicle of a pervasive chemical disaster that must be more urgently and openly addressed.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.