No force of nature has more powerfully shaped the human adventure than water, for the obvious reason that we can’t live without it. Much of what we call civilization has entailed civilizing this substance—mostly by hemming it in. In this sparkling, flowing, world-spanning narrative, Gies compellingly shows why water will always win in the end, particularly in an urbanizing world facing disruptive climate change. She also reveals, through guides ranging from China’s ‘sponge city’ designers to beavers, how liberating water can liberate us, in turn.
A Book by Erica Gies
Water Always Wins
Thriving in an Age of Drought and Deluge
A revelatory and urgent look at how ancient water wisdom is reshaping how we live on a changing planet. Available in three editions worldwide and as audiobook.
Explainer
About the Book
Recognition
Honors & Awards
Rachel Carson Award for Excellence in Environmental Journalism
Sierra Club
California River Award
Friends of the River
Falling Walls Science Breakthrough of the Year Finalist
Social Sciences and Humanities category
Rachel Carson Environment Book Award, honorable mention
Society of Environmental Journalists
Metcalf Institute Leeson Lecture
University of Rhode Island
Harvey Southam Lecturer and Residency
University of Victoria
Praise
What Readers Are Saying
A gripping investigation into water and the champion sleuths who research it and engage in daunting yet necessary efforts to restore health to a damaged planet…. Considering exploding populations, water inequality, and ever-increasing climate crises, Gies persuasively argues that much must and can be done to improve our understanding of and relationship with water.
Water Always Wins reveals the mysteries of water’s journey from source to sea, and shows how working with nature can help save us from the ravages of climate change. Through fascinating stories and detailed research, Gies challenges modern societies to relinquish some control, and let water go where it wants to go. This eye-opening book is filled with brilliant insights, creativity, inspiration, and honest hope.
We’ve tried, in every way we know, to control and contain water on this planet. But there are limits to our power, which become clearer as escalating cycles of flooding and drought increasingly make a mockery of our efforts. As Gies ably demonstrates, the time has come to learn some lessons from liquid, and to start trying to live gracefully in our wonderfully aqueous world.
Vibrant… An inspiring, insightful book about the myriad ways that ‘water detectives’ are helping water to heal the planet.
From California’s agricultural lands to the marshes of Iraq, from beavers to microinvertebrates, from early water cultures in India and Peru to today’s water crises and the challenges of climate change, Gies uses her formidable reporting skills and personal experiences to weave together beautiful stories about water, its impact on our lives, and how it’s long past time to repair our relationship with this most precious resource.
In a world awash with water stress, Gies and the many people featured in her pages are leading the way to a future where people might live in a sustainable relationship with the element that sustains us all. It is entertaining, engaging, and applicable nearly everywhere in the world—every reader will find connections to their home communities here.
In the World
Media & Appearances
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A NatGeo Explorer’s Quest to Help Solve Drought
PBS Amanpour & Co / CNN
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These Could Be Solutions to California’s Water Crisis
Fox News The Next Revolution
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‘Recalibrating’ Our Relationships with Water
NM PBS Our Land
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Bay Area ‘Water Always Wins’ Author Surveys World for Water Solutions
ABC 7 News
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How CA’s Ancient Hidden Waterways Can Recharge Groundwater
ABC 7 News
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Flooding During Drought: Rethinking California’s Water System
KQED Forum
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Solutions to Drought and Deluge in Asking, ‘What Does Water Want?’
KQED Forum
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Solution for California’s Drought Could Lie Beneath Us
KQED Morning Edition
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Rising Seas, Floods, or Droughts: Living with Water as Nature Intended
KERA Think
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During Climate Change, What Does Water Want?
Texas Public Radio The Source
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Drought, Deluge, and the Fix: Doing What Water Wants
CBC What on Earth
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Fears of water insecurity and extreme drought
CBC The Current
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How sponge cities protect against floods
CBC The Current
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Water Always Wins author Erica Gies
CBC On the Island
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What Water Wants, and How to Live With It
Wisconsin Public Radio Ideas Network
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What Water Wants
KPFA Terra Verde
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Slow Water: How to Combat Floods and Droughts
Radio New Zealand
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Water Always Wins
WVIK Quad Cities NPR
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Slow Water
The Enviro Show
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Global Economic Forum on Water
New York City
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United Nations Water Conference
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of R&D
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Colorado Water Congress
Denver, Colorado
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Bioneers: Revolution from the Heart of Nature
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Metcalf Institute Leeson Lecture
University of Rhode Island
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Harvey Southam Lecture
University of Victoria
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Capps Forum on Ethics and Public Policy
University of California
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Penn Futures
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Australian National University Institute for Climate, Energy and Disaster Solutions
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Central Valley Flood Protection Board
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Illinois Association for Floodplain and Stormwater Management
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Tucson Festival of Books
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River Restoration Northwest
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Eco-Farm Conference
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American Water Resources Association Conference
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Water Education Foundation Water Summit
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Frontiers in Hydrology
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BlueTech Forum
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Open Future Forum
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Palouse Basin Water Summit
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Protect Our Water Jackson Hole
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Google Climate Talks
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Science and Environment Council of Southwest Florida
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CalTrout
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Op/Ed — California Could Capture Floodwaters to Fight Drought
The New York Times
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Op/Ed — Ongoing Development Is Part of the Colorado River Problem
Scientific American
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Review — Friend, Not Commodity
Times Literary Supplement
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Review — In the Battle of Human vs. Water, ‘Water Always Wins’
Science News
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Review — It Will Come to Pass
Literary Review of Canada
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Review — Helping Water Find Its Own Level
Undark
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Review — Going With the Flow
American Scientist
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Review — Why We Need Slow Solutions to Our Water Problems
The Revelator
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Review — Water Always Wins by Erica Gies
Geographical
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Interview — A Return to Wild, Unrestricted Waterways Offers Solutions
Civil Eats
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Interview — Reflections on the Extraordinary Power of Slow Water
National Observer
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Interview — “Quietly Radical” Book Makes Case for Slow Water
Great Lakes Now
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Interview — Ancient River Beds Could Hold Solution to California’s Water Woes
KQED Science
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Interview — Climate Change Is Water Change
Inside Climate News
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Excerpt — Slow Water: Can We Tame Urban Floods by Going with the Flow?
The Guardian
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Excerpt — What Does Water Want? Most Humans Seem to Have Forgotten
Psyche
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Excerpt — Collaboration, Not Control
Earth Island Journal
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Excerpt — Why We Need Muck to Fight Rising Sea Levels
Nautilus
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Excerpt — Letting the Sea Have Its Way
Hakai Magazine
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Excerpt — To Minimize Floods and Droughts, We Need to Ask What Water Wants
Ensia
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Excerpt — How “Water Detectives” Are Protecting Cities
Capital Daily
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Excerpt — The Urban Flooding Solution to China’s Deadly Problem
South China Morning Post
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Comment — Promontory Point Is Crumbling. ‘Slow Water’ Fixes May Be Critical
Chicago Tribune
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The best science books coming your way in 2022
New Scientist
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Water Always Wins: A Conversation with Erica Gies
Blue Dot
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‘Water Always Wins’ So Why Are We Fighting It?
Mongabay
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The Slow Water Movement (starts around 38:00)
The Steve Hilton Show
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Slow Water Movements
Water Talk
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Water Always Wins
New Books Network
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Water Always Wins
Population Balance
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Go With the Flow: Erica Gies on Embracing Water's Natural Path
What About Water? with Jay Famiglietti
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Climate Change Water Resilience with Journalist Erica Gies
Path to Zero
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Water Always Wins
Maven's Notebook · Water Shelf podcast
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Slow Water Wins
Farm to Table Talk
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What Does Water Want? A Conversation with Author Erica Gies
Speaking of Water
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Water Always Wins, But That Doesn’t Mean We Lose
Sustain What?
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Slow Water Solutions for Drought and Deluge
Sustainable World
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Go with the flow, with 'Water Always Wins' author & journalist Erica Gies
Brave New Girls
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A hopeful journey around the world and across time, illuminating better ways to live with water.
Other editions