cover image The Secret World of Oil

The Secret World of Oil

Ken Silverstein. Verso (Random, dist.), $25.95 (240p) ISBN 978-1-78168-137-4

Corrupt dictators with a penchant for boiling their adversaries, shady fixers who know just the right palms to grease, unctuous lobbyists in smoke-filled rooms—the global market for oil is not known for its cleanliness, political or environmental. Silverstein, a former editor at Harper’s, collects a number of his previously published profiles of the colorful characters inhabiting this ecosystem. Lightweight and entertaining, these sketches are suitably salacious, but, for the most part, expose relatively little about oil per se. Teodorin Nguema Obiang, son of the ruler of Equatorial Guinea, loves his cars, and “when he saw gawkers stop to admire” his two-million dollar Bugatti at a nightclub, he sent his chauffeur “back to Malibu by cab so [he] could drive back his second Bugatti to park next to it,” but his graft is actually confined to selling off his country’s rainforest; slightly less ostentatious relatives control the oil. Bretton Sciaroni, a legal hack fired by the Reagan administration for his unseemly defense of unlimited executive authority, went on to work for the junta in El Salvador and Hun Sen in Cambodia, but this has nothing to do with oil. Silverstein’s muckraking will appeal to progressive interests, but oil itself does not tie this motley collection together. (May)