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Stain-Resistant, Nonstick, Waterproof, and Lethal The Hidden Dangers of C8
Book Code: C9452
ISBN: 0-275-99452-X
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-99452-5
208 pages, 11 photos, 2 maps
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 3/30/2007
List Price: $39.95 (UK Sterling Price: £22.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Awards:
  • 2006 Associated Press of Ohio Best Business Writer
  • Uncovering the Truth Award
Reviews:
  • In this book, in crisp, simple and clear language, Callie Lyons....[s]ummarizes this story of contamination, which she had been following right from its beginning. The book has enough scientific details to define what C-8 is and why it is considered such a health risk. In 15 well organized chapters, the volume covers DuPont manufacturing processes, the history of C-8 leakage into public waters, bureaucratic hurdles and industry pressures, scientific and federal investigations, public activism and the residents' lawsuit, potential further exposure risks, and the phasing out of C-8. Chapter-by-chapter notes and a section on other resources round out this book. I recommend Stain-Resistant, Nonstick, Waterproof and Lethal for anyone in the general public who is interested in environmental pollution and public awareness and action.
    —SB&F
    September/October 2007
  • Callie Lyons details the slippery history of a Teflon toxin.
    —Mother Jones
    2007
  • The chemistry and toxicology, the government investigation, the reaction by the DuPont company that makes the stuff, popular movements, law suits, and similar cases are all part of the story.
    —SciTech Book News
    June 2007
  • She's a warrior against environmental pollution and a fighter for public health.
    —Ohio News Network
    2007
  • Endorsement From Julie Zickefoose,
    Ohio writer and naturalist:
    As a resident of the mid-Ohio Valley, only a couple of dozen miles from the apparent national epicenter of C8 pollution in Little Hocking, my perception of the substance is that it sprang full-blown on the scene in 2004. Little did I, or millions nationwide, realize that C8 has been silently percolating through the soil I walk on, the air I breathe, the water I drink, and the food that I have eaten for most of my life. With thousands of industrial applications, from makeup to fabric coatings to cookware to food packaging, products made with this chemical are in every room of my house. If it's that pervasive, it must be safe... right? In this book, Callie Lyons pulls back the curtain on a problem of potentially monstrous proportions, and chronicles a growing uneasiness that all is not well in a Teflon-coated world.
  • Endorsement From Ann Stoddard,
    Artist and Activist:
    Callie Lyons brings journalistic depth to describing how C8 perfluorocarbons have contaminated drinking water in the nation's heartland, and exposed consumers everywhere to this carcinogen via microwave popcorn, stain-resistant carpeting, Post-It notes, nonstick cookware, etc. By documenting how state and federal environmental policies have favored DuPont and how groups in Southeastern Ohio are challenging these policies, this timely book suggests that global protections against C8 are vital for the health of this generation and generations to come.
Description: "It's everywhere. It's toxic. And it lasts forever." Asbestos? Nuclear waste? No. This statement, made by the Environmental Protection Agency in 2003, refers to a little-known but ubiquitous chemical compound whose trade name is C8. Manufactured by DuPont, it is used in the making of a plethora of stain-resistant consumer products, including microwave popcorn bags, food packaging, nail polish, car finishes, pizza boxes, and many other common items. Recently named a "likely carcinogen" by the EPA, C8 has been linked to cancer, reproductive disorders, birth defects, and respiratory problems.
The first members of the public to hear about C8, in 2002, were the residents of the Mid-Ohio Valley, whose water supplies were found to contain detectable amounts as the result of emissions from the DuPont Washington Works Plant near Parkersburg, West Virginia. As a result, in 2003 the EPA announced it was launching a multi-agency review of the manmade chemical, which became the largest investigation of its kind. The EPA was concerned because early tests indicated that C8 could already--and unexpectedly--be found in the blood of 96 percent of Americans. In 2005 DuPont settled a class action lawsuit with Valley water consumers for more than $200 million, and the EPA has called for a global phase-out of C8 involving eight companies.
As a local journalist, Lyons has covered the C8 issue from the beginning. Here she tells the story of how the danger of C8 first came to light when a West Virginia family lost an entire herd of 280 cattle to a mysterious wasting disease within a mere decade, following forty years of successful farming. The die-off began in the mid-1980s, after the family sold some land to DuPont. The chemical company used the property as a landfill, dumping C8, which made its way into the public water supply. By the time the EPA investigated the situation, the same substance detected in the water in West Virginia and Ohio--which has by now spread to a total of twelve states and counting--could also be found leeching off of thousands of consumer products and into the bloodstreams of millions of people around the world.
LC Card Number: 2007000064
LCC Class: RA1242
Dewey Class: 363
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