Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water
What is the author's tone in Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water by Marc Reisner?
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The tone of Cadillac Desert is set by the Percy Bysshe Shelley poem Ozymandias in the book's beginning, as well as with the chapter titles: "A Country of Illusion," "Rivals in Crime," "Those Who Refuse to Learn ..., " "Things Fall Apart," and "A Civilization, if You Can Keep It." Reisner sounds didactic throughout, and his rhetoric reveals a strong environmentalist agenda. In repeated evaluations of the American West development, he discusses some benefits of the development but always counterweights them with judgmental statements such as: "The cost of all this, however, was a vandalization of both our natural heritage and our economic future, and the reckoning has not even begun."