""A chilling indictment of how government and big business prized profits over health and a moving tale of one woman's struggle to understand why."" ' People Magazine ""A fast-moving, urgent narrative that catalogues the evidence of the many different forms of pollution and the likelihood that they contributed to the cancers, documenting the choices and treatment she must face as a cancer patient."" ' Publishers Weekly ""Presents convincing proof that Waukegan and Lake Michigan are prime suspects in the sisters' cancers."" ' Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ""In Lake Effect , Nichols, now 49, weaves her investigations of Waukegan's pollution and the causes of cancer with her own story of diagnosis and treatment. It's a thoughtful examination of the risks faced by bodies made by nature in a world fabricated by technology."" ' Pittsburgh City Paper "".Eloquent indictment of decades of corporate carelessness, official inaction and American society's reflexive focus on searching for a cure instead of a cause."" ' EnviroBlog ""I read this book like a desert hiker drinks water'in great, thankful gulps.
It's a scientific investigation of the most intimate sort. It's a family memoir with public policy implications. 'Stories matter,' says Nancy Nichols. And then she proves it."" ' Sandra Steingraber, biologist and author of Living Downstream ""A stunning, haunting, exquisite memoir. As a scientist, I'm dumbstruck. As a human being, I'm appalled."" ' Devra Davis, Director, Center for Environmental Oncology, University of Pittsburgh ""In Lake Effect Nancy Nichols beautifully weaves together the story of her sister's death and her own ill health with the equally compelling story of her hometown of Waukegan on Lake Michigan's shores.
Her quest to make sense of her family's devastating illnesses and the region's toxic chemicals is clear-eyed, eloquent, and revealing."" ' Kathlyn Conway, author of Ordinary Life and Illness and the Limits of Expression ""Powerful. Intense. Compelling. With spare, elegant proseĆ. poignant yet scientifically accurate, Nancy Nichols weaves a personal story into a universal tragedy, about toxic waste, careless industry, and human suffering."" ' Pete Myers, coauthor of Our Stolen Future.