“If Gabriel García Márquez had been born on a ranch along the South Platte River, where water disputes sometimes lead to a bullet to the brain, and where greedy suburbs, feedlots and oil frackers conspire to turn Colorado grasslands to desert, this is the book he would’ve written. The surreal postscript and dirge for the little house on the prairie.”
–Mike Davis, political activist, urban theorist, and author of Ecology of Fear and City of Quartz
“This is the best book I’ve read since Major John Wesley Powell’s epic work over a century ago, on why the American West will always thirst for water. Using her own pioneering family history in Colorado, d'Elgin weaves past and present into a personal memoir that is touching, funny, and prescient of what’s to come. Anyone concerned about our national drought and the fallout on our food and where it comes from must read this book.”
—Betty Harper Fussell, writer and food historian
“The global water crisis is upon us. D’Elgin has taken that crisis and personalized it into a compelling story of greed, bad governance, and horrible water management practices to be sure, but also of sacrifice, hope, and love. A wonderful book.”
—Maude Barlow, co-founder of the Blue Planet Project and chair of the board for Food & Water Watch
"The Man Who Thought He Owned Water, an unusual family memoir cum ecological treatise, brings home the complications of water scarcity."
—Foreword Reviews
"A compelling biographical account. . . . d'Elgin's narrative makes engaging reading, and her insight into Colorado's water issues is important. . . . This is a book that I highly recommend."
—Colorado Central Magazine
"[A] must read for all of us water consumers who once fantasized that Colorado would never change."
—Valley Courier
"[A] well-written defense of rural life and a plea for readers to take seriously the interconnectedness between cities and farms."
—Journal of Historical Geography
"With lovely descriptions, poetic reflection, and absurdly funny, intimate expression, D’Elgin draws you into each fold of this epic family history."
—Civil Eats
"[This] sometimes funny, often impassioned, highly personal chronicle of [d'Elgin's] family’s experience running an irrigated farm in northeastern Colorado. . . . painstakingly recap[s] the area’s early historical settlement and the convoluted legalese that came to rule over water appropriation, and does it in such a way that makes the tale surprisingly comprehensible for a general audience."
—AG Journal
"Tershia d'Elgin's book is lucidly written, combining the personal story of her family's history and a well-researched examination of how water laws work and how they can be changed."
—Water and Power Associates