cover image Off the Grid: Inside the Movement for More Space, Less Government, and True Independence in Modern America

Off the Grid: Inside the Movement for More Space, Less Government, and True Independence in Modern America

Nick Rosen, Penguin, $15 paper (304p) ISBN 978-0-14-311738-4

Fed up with "the hyper-consumption of the past thirty years, the pointless acquisitions, the hopeless materialism, and the obsession with celebrity trivia," British journalist and filmmaker Rosen sets out across the U.S. to find the perfect off-the-grid community "beyond the reach of the power cables and water lines that intersect the modern world." His journey brings him into contact with a colorful collection of rebels and outcasts—aging hippies, anarchist kids, a middle-aged couple with an "off-the-grid McMansion" in Colorado—and he sprinkles his tale with the sorts of practical tips likely to appeal to anyone considering a similar adventure: the Clivus Multrum is "the Hummer of composting toilets." What Rosen lacks is a knack for storytelling; he would have done well to step back and let his subjects speak for themselves. Instead, he constantly inserts himself into the frame and insists on passing humorless judgment on nearly everyone he meets (and a fair number of people he doesn’t), and even whole cities are roundly dismissed (Boulder is "the smuggest town in America"). His curmudgeonly asides are off-putting, and it’s disappointing to see the book’s idealism and noble reach devolve into grousing. (Aug.)