If you live in the southwestern corner of the United States, you鈥檝e probably been seeing drought in the news for the past decade. The idea of impending doom via desiccation grabs headlines. It鈥檚 less sexy to talk about the day-to-day ways cities, farmers, and advocacy groups are conserving water, but it鈥檚 arguably more important.聽
The drought catastrophe narrative gets in the way of meaningful water conservation, says聽John Fleck in his new book,聽 ($30,聽Island Press), and it鈥檚 not actually true to what鈥檚 happening on the ground.

Fleck, a longtime water reporter聽who is now director of the University of New Mexico鈥檚 ,聽covered聽water and the environment 聽from the 1980s through 2015. 鈥淟ike many who manage, engineer, utilize, plan for, and write about western water today, I grew up with the expectation of catastrophe,鈥 he writes. 鈥淏ut as drought set in again across the Colorado River Basin in the first decade of the twenty-first century, I was forced to grapple with a contradiction鈥eople鈥檚 faucets were still running. Their farms were not drying up. No city was left abandoned.鈥
Fleck鈥檚 book, like a lot of current water reporting, deals mainly with the Colorado River and its tributaries, which provide聽the majority of water to seven western states. The Colorado River supports 10聽percent of America鈥檚 GDP鈥攁bout $1.4 trillion鈥攁nd it brings water to 40 million people. It鈥檚 governed by a series of compacts, codified in 1922, that allocate how much water each state gets. But these compacts are problematic. They don鈥檛 incentivize conservation, and聽because conditions were much wetter leading up to the 1920s, when the compacts were written, more water is allocated than actually exists in the river. Now聽we鈥檙e faced with what water managers call a structural deficit: demand outweighs supply, and climate change is shrinking that supply further.
Fleck digs into the ways we鈥檙e dealing with that deficit, from sprinkler systems to interstate compacts that outline how states share water. Water law can be arcane聽and, for lack of a better word, dry. But Fleck works through the wonkiness with concrete examples that show the social side of conservation and community politics. He writes like a newspaper reporter, clear and spare, and he does a good job of outlining the policy and history that set up the ways we use water today. He explains how the Homestead Act, which motivated western migration by promising settlers 160-acre tracts of land, led to vast dam projects, and why it鈥檚 so complicated to set up a water market that works. He鈥檚 also empathetic to the traditional water uses that got us where we are today. He gives a measured defense of alfalfa farming鈥攐ften cited as one of the biggest wastes of water鈥攂ecause of the economic stability it brings to rural areas.聽
That鈥檚 not to say the structural deficit isn鈥檛 serious聽or that major change isn鈥檛 necessary. Water management is rife with sketchy political deals, Lake Mead is still dropping, and the delta is dry more often than not.聽But Fleck鈥檚 main argument is that when faced with scarcity, cities, communities, and individual water users don鈥檛 just freak out and hoard water鈥攖hey come up with smart, collaborative ways to deal with it. That鈥檚 why Vegas still exists聽and why aquifers in Fleck鈥檚 hometown of Albuquerque are rebounding after years of drawing down groundwater.聽
Fleck says he wanted the book to bridge the gap between farmers, environmentalists, and city dwellers who care about conservation鈥攖o get them all on the same page. The book is wide聽ranging in that way, but it behooves the reader to come in with a little bit of a water background, or at least a working knowledge of the Colorado River system. He does a good job of describing the specific issues鈥攈ow saline ocean water seeped into the groundwater of Redondo Beach, for instance鈥攂ut sometimes the connective tissue, the river itself, is missing. It can be hard to draw the connection between cotton farming in Arizona and municipal water use in Los Angeles and how they bear on each other聽without a mental map of the waterways. It鈥檚 clear that Fleck has this map in his own mind鈥攁nd it just goes to show that even his valiant efforts to clarify water issues aren鈥檛 always a match for the monstrous nature of the issue.
But this is not just a book for water wonks. Even if you care only enough to skim the headlines about the shrinking Salton Sea聽or Lake Mead鈥檚 burgeoning bathtub ring, Fleck鈥檚 book overall is a clear-eyed look at both the systemic inefficiencies in how water is used in the West聽and the smart ways they can be addressed.
And there has聽been a gap in that coverage. For decades, the go-to book about water in the West has been Mark Reisner鈥檚 , a 600-page opus on the corruption and complication of the water system. It鈥檚 a great, detailed, intricately reported book, but it鈥檚 30 years old. We needed something new. Fleck鈥檚 book addresses current events and coming struggles as much as it does history, and that鈥檚 important going into a future that will be defined by the way we use water.