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Winner of
the William P. Clements Prize for the Best Non-Fiction
Book on Southwestern America Published in 1999
Salt
Dreams:
Land and Water in Low Down California
University
of New Mexico Press, 1999
Honoring William deBuys
In
low places consequences collect, and in all North
America you cannot get much lower than the Imperial
Valley of southern California, where one town, 186
feet below sea level, calls itself the Lowest Down
City in the Western Hemisphere, and where the waters
of the Colorado River sustain a billion-dollar
agricultural industry. The consequences of that
industry drain from the valley into the accidentally
man-made Salton Sea, California's largest lake and a
vital stopping place for migratory waterfowl. Today
the Salton Sea is in desperate environmental
trouble. A second river also ends in the Salton Sea.
It is a river of dreams, the remains of which may be
seen in the failed real estate developments that
sprawl beside the sea. As the ending point of both
the real Colorado and this river of dreams, the
Salton Sea has become emblematic of much of the
history of the American West.
Its troubling story is masterfully told here in
William deBuys's narrative and
Joan Myers's austerely beautiful
photographs. The story of Southern California is
fundamentally a story about the control of nature.
Beginning with the Yuman-speaking tribes encountered
by the Spanish in the sixteenth century, deBuys
traces the subsequent exploration and development of
the region through the Gold Rush of 1849, the
government-sponsored surveys that followed, and the
inept tinkering with the river by an assortment of
irrigation and development interests that resulted
in the floods that formed the Salton Sea nearly a
century ago. He introduces us to a gallery of rogues
and dreamers who saw a great future for this arid
wilderness but could never refrain from interference
with the forces of nature. The floods that produced
the Salton Sea created a vast desert oasis, but the
agricultural exploitation of the region, combined
with evaporation, poisoned that paradise.
The stark beauty of the desert, the engineering
feats that have transformed the landscape, and the
eerie spectacle of Salton City and its ruined
beaches and abandoned yacht club are the subject of
Myers' photographs, made over a period of more than
ten years. In the last section of Salt Dreams,
deBuys acquaints us with the human and avian
denizens of the region, all struggling for survival
as the twentieth century draws to a close. The
history of chicanery and greed recounted in deBuys'
narrative and his empathy with the desert dwellers
he and Myers have come to know--hardworking laborers
and entrepreneurs who live on both sides of the
Mexicali border, eccentrics hiding out in the Salton
Desert, pelicans dying of avian botulism--are
crucial to an understanding of the border issues of
today and the impassioned environmental debate on
whether--and how--to save the Salton Sea.
Other
awards received:
the 1999 Western States
Book Award for Creative Nonfiction; the 1999
Clements Prize for the Best Nonfiction Book on
Southwestern America; the 2000 Norris and Carol
Hundley Award from the Pacific Coast Branch of the
American Historical Association; and the 2002 Donald
Pflueger Local History Award from the Historical
Society of Southern California.
The $2,500
Clements Book Prize honors fine writing and original
research on the American Southwest. The competition is
open to any nonfiction book, including biography, on any
aspect of Southwestern life, past or present. The
William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies is part
of SMU's Dedman College and affiliated with the
Department of History. It was created to promote
research, publishing, teaching and public programming in
a variety of fields related to the American Southwest.

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