Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Night fire, big oil, poison air, and Margie Richard's fight to save her town, Ronnie Greene

Label
Night fire, big oil, poison air, and Margie Richard's fight to save her town, Ronnie Greene
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Night fire
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Ronnie Greene
Sub title
big oil, poison air, and Margie Richard's fight to save her town
Summary
The Diamond neighborhood was an all-black enclave in the mostly white town of Norco, Louisiana, aptly named for the New Orleans Refining Company, an industrial processing plant. Margie Eugene Richard was raised in the shadow of a giant chemical plant operated by Shell, and witnessed her neighbors fall ill amid the toxic waste the plant emitted year after year. Her own sister, Naomi, eventually succumbed to a rare lung disease linked to environmental hazards. Determined to see Shell take responsibility for its actions, Margie and her neighbors-largely poor and with few obvious resources-educated themselves not only on the consequences of environmental poison but also on how to fight back. The battle took them from Diamond's four streets all the way to The Hague and beyond. The unexpected results won Margie the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize and helped clean up a community. With riveting narrative drive, Night Fire illustrates how determination and grit can move even the most stubborn of corporate giants
Target audience
adult
Classification
Content