James C. Scott reframes rivers as alive and dynamic, revealing the consequences of treating them as resources for our profit A New Yorker Best Book of the Year “Informative, enjoyable, and provocative. . . . Scott’s [prose] is dry, clear, and scalding with moral purpose.”―Becca Rothfeld, Washington Post Rivers, on a long view, are alive. They are born; they change; they shift their channels; they forge new routes to the sea; they move both gradually and violently; they can teem (usually) with life; they may die a quasi-natural death; they are frequently maimed and even murdered. It is the annual flood pulse―the brief time when the river occupies the floodplain―that gives a river its vitality, but it is human engineering that kills it, suppressing the flood pulse with dams, irrigation, siltation, dikes, and levees. In demonstrating these threats to the riverine world, award-winning author James C. Scott examines the life history of a particular river, the Ayeyarwady (Irrawaddy) of Burma, the heartland and superhighway of Burman culture. Scott opens our understanding of rivers to encompass their entirety―tributaries, wetlands, floodplains, backwaters, eddies, periodic marshlands, and the assemblage of life forms dependent on rivers for their existence and well-being. For anyone interested in the Anthropocene and the Great Acceleration, rivers offer a striking example of the consequences of human intervention in trying to control and domesticate a natural process, the complexity and variability of which we barely understand. “Informative, enjoyable, and provocative. . . . Scott’s [prose] is dry, clear, and scalding with moral purpose.”―Becca Rothfeld, Washington Post “Its virtue lies in a simple, almost schematic idea pursued across disciplines.”―Timothy Farrington, Wall Street Journal “A posthumous conclusion to a scholarly career of upending conventional wisdom . . . and [of] writing sweeping treatments of the distant past, which nonetheless managed to broach some of the most vexing political questions of our time.”―Nikil Saval, New Yorker “Other books provide critiques of the way that humans, through their states and corporations, use, abuse and mismanage rivers: Scott’s does so with scholarship and vigour.”― The Economist A New Yorker Best Book of the Year “What is a river for? . . . What is a river in the first place? A line on a map, winding its way to the ocean? Or a set of relations―between silt and water, animals and humans―that expands across an entire watershed? In an era of interlocking climate crises, we need answers to such fundamental questions, and in his posthumously published In Praise of Floods , the late James C. Scott offers an expansive, thoughtful set of them.”―Kevin P. Donovan, Boston Review “The book paints a strong picture of the challenges that biodiversity in the Ayeyarwady faces and highlights the inherent contradictions in man-made conservation efforts.”―Maximillian Morch, Asian Review of Books “ In Praise of Floods aims to ‘think with’ rivers in order to consider both what they reveal about reality and the impact of our constrained imaginations on them. . . . [Scott] powerfully illuminates the short-sightedness of humankind’s brittle reengineering of riverine assemblages.”―Vincent Miller, Commonweal “In this posthumously published book, Scott urges his readers ‘to recognize the animated liveliness of the river and its tributaries’ . . . [and] the inarguable coalescence of rivers, weather patterns, soils, and the humans and nonhuman creatures in their midst.”― Kirkus Reviews “An essential book for understanding Scott.”―Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution (blog) “A fleet, searching book, with the laudable ambition to change people’s minds about how they relate to the rivers around them, in the hopes of creating a more sustainable future for all plants and animals.”―Brian Slattery, New Haven Independent “The book does a great job in explaining how river topography changes over time, altering not just the physical boundaries of a river in its banks and watercourse, but also the political boundaries, of villages and claimed territories.”―Nick Parish, Current Flow State (blog) “ In Praise of Floods would, of course, be of interest to longtime readers of Scott, those familiar with his enduring spirit and compelling writing. It might also serve as an entry point for those curious about the late scholar, about his persistent theorizations around rivers and infrastructures and governance, and about the life that water can bring us in the future, if we only allow it―and ourselves―to run free.”―Morgan P. Vickers, AAG Review of Books “An astonishing and beautifully written book that redefines rivers and our relationship with them.”―Tim Flannery, author of The Future Eaters and The Weather Makers “What a gift! If we must lose James Scott, we at least gain his insights on rivers and the power of their unruliness. This book will resha