New book: Rust: the Longest War by Jonathan Waldman

Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials

ISSN: 0003-5599

Article publication date: 5 May 2015

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Citation

(2015), "New book: Rust: the Longest War by Jonathan Waldman", Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Vol. 62 No. 3. https://doi.org/10.1108/ACMM.12862caa.018.html

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited


New book: Rust: the Longest War by Jonathan Waldman

Article Type: Conferences, training and publications From: Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, Volume 62, Issue 3

It has been called “the great destroyer” and “the evil”. The Pentagon refers to it as “the pervasive menace”. It destroys cars, fells bridges, sinks ships and sparks house fires, and nearly brought down the Statue of Liberty. Rust costs America more than $400 billion per year – more than all other natural disasters combined.

In a thrilling drama of man versus nature, journalist Jonathan Waldman travels from Key West, Florida, to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, to meet the colorful and often reclusive people who are fighting our mightiest and unlikeliest enemy. He sneaks into an abandoned steelworks with a brave artist, and then he nearly gets kicked out of Ball Corporation’s Can School. Across the Arctic, he follows a massive high-tech robot that hunts for rust in the Alaska pipeline. On a Florida film set, he meets the Defense Department’s rust ambassador, who reveals that the navy’s number one foe is not a foreign country but oxidation itself. At Home Depot’s mother ship in Atlanta, he hunts unsuccessfully for rust products with the store’s rust-products buyer – and then tracks down some snake-oil salesmen whose potions are not for sale at the Rust Store. Along the way, Waldman encounters flying pigs, Trekkies, decapitations, exploding Coke cans, rust boogers and nerdy superheroes.

The result is a fresh and often funny account of an overlooked engineering endeavor that is as compelling as it is grand, illuminating a hidden phenomenon that shapes the modern world. Rust affects everything from the design of our currency to the composition of our tap water, and it will determine the legacy we leave on this planet. This exploration of corrosion, and the incredible lengths we go to fight it, is narrative nonfiction at its very best – a fascinating and important subject, delivered with energy and wit.

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