Water Shelf Podcast Podcast Por Justin Scott-Coe arte de portada

Water Shelf Podcast

Water Shelf Podcast

De: Justin Scott-Coe
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The Water Shelf Podcast is where authors, reviewers, academics, and aficionados discuss water books, past and present. For water book news and reviews and to sign up for our newsletter, please visit the Water Shelf website at mavensnotebook.com/watershelf. The Water Shelf is a production of Maven's Notebook, California's water news central – subscribe to weekly or daily emails at mavensnotebook.com.Justin Scott-Coe Arte Historia y Crítica Literaria
Episodios
  • "The Water Recycling Revolution" by Bill and Rosemarie Alley
    Mar 7 2026

    The dynamic writing team Bill and Rosemarie Alley discuss their latest book, The Water Recycling Revolution: Tapping into the Future (Rowman & Littlefield, 2022). What's revolutionary about recycled water? How did we get over the "yuck factor"? What are recycled water developers currently getting right and wrong? Find out here!

    Dr. William M. Alley is Director of Science and Technology for the National Ground Water Association. Rosemarie Alley writes fiction, poetry, and nonfiction and is a literacy specialist.

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    37 m
  • "Legal Geographies of Water" by Cristy Clark
    Feb 6 2026

    Cristy Clark explores the "pluriverse of water realities" in her new book, Legal Geographies of Water: The Spaces, Places and Narratives of Human-Water Relations (Earthscan Routledge, 2025). Enjoy our lively conversation about how legal geography can both explain and improve human-water relations, what the human right to water actually means, and how Marvel Multiverse films may actually help us understand the "ontologies of living waters."

    Dr. Cristy Clark is an Associate Professor at the Canberra Law School.

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    46 m
  • “Body in a Barrel" by Aaron Mead
    Jan 11 2026

    Season 3 of the Water Shelf Podcast begins with a bang! Aaron Mead, author of Body in a Barrel: A Las Vegas Mafia Crime Novella, talks with me about his fictional treatment of Lake Mead’s slow, climate-change-induced unveiling of long-immersed depths. Building on his written Water Shelf interview, Mr. Mead discusses his water industry and theological studies roots, two layers that contributed complexity as well as publication challenges for his path-breaking work.

    Mr. Mead is a Senior Engineer with Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.

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    35 m
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