What does an environmentalist do when she realizes she will inherit
mineral rights and royalties on fracked oil wells in North Dakota? How
does she decide between financial security and living as a committed
conservationist who wants to leave her grandchildren a healthy world?
After her father's death, Lisa Westberg Peters investigates the stories
behind the leases her mother now holds. She learns how her grandfather's
land purchases near Williston in the 1940s reflect four generations of
creative risk-taking in her father's Swedish immigrant family. She
explores the ties between frac sand mining on the St. Croix River and
the halting, difficult development of North Dakota's oil, locked in
shale two miles down and pursued since the 1920s. And then there are the
surprising and immediate connections between the development of North
Dakota oil and Peters's own life in Minneapolis.
Catapulted into a world of complicated legal jargon, spectacular feats
of engineering, and rich history, Peters travels to the oil patch and
sees both the wealth and the challenges brought by the boom. She
interviews workers and farmers, geologists and lawyers, those who
welcome and those who reject the development, and she finds herself able
to see shades of gray in what had previously seemed black and white.