Bryn Nelson, PhD, is an award-winning science writer and former microbiologist who decided he d much rather write about microbes than experiment on them. After receiving his PhD from the University of Washington, he shifted course and completed a graduate program in science writing at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Since then, he has accumulated more than two decades of journalism experience, including seven years at the Newsday science desk where he covered genetics, stem cell research, evolution, ecology, and conservation. Nelson has written for dozens of other outlets, from The New York Times, NBCNews.com, and The Daily Beast to Nature, Mosaic, and Science News for Students. Among his honors, Nelson has won an Association of Health Care Journalists award for larger newspapers and wire services, a New York Press Club award for best web-exclusive content, and two APEX Grand Awards for trade publication writing. In his spare time, he enjoys photography, singing, travel, and gardening in Seattle, where he lives with his husband, Geoff, and their energetic boxador, Piper.
We're trained by history, culture and our own childhoods not to talk too much or even think too hard about the products of our intestines. Well, get over that. Flush is a delightful counter to our ingrained and misplaced disgust, a deep, thoughtful, erudite and surprisingly funny tour through the history, mystery and promise inherent in our waste. --Maryn McKenna, author of Big Chicken, Superbug, and Beating Back the Devil Bryn Nelson loves nearly all things scatological, from farts to poop, input and output. In his massively-researched Flush Nelson will quickly have you rethinking everything you thought you knew about shit, manure, piss, turds, urine - whatever terms you prefer. And he'll convince you that what comes from your body, and even your physical self after death, just might save the planet. It's a hell of a journey. --Laurie Garrett, Pulitzer Prize winner writer and author of The Coming Plague and Betrayal of Trust A book about poop? How gross, right? Actually, no, not at all -- and that's exactly the point Bryn Nelson makes in this smart, deeply researched book. The revulsion we feel toward an everyday bodily function is holding us back from a slew of imaginative and even ingenious responses to some of society's biggest problems. Can we find our way to a shittier and therefore happier future? Nelson thinks we can, and you will, too, after reading Flush. --Dan Fagin, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Toms River: A Story of Science and Salvation Maybe you've long been fascinated with the world-saving, paradigm-shifting power of feces. Or perhaps you're brand new to the sustainable power of poop! Either way, Flush is a taboo breaker and a fecal fantasia. --Caitlin Doughty, New York Times bestselling author of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and From Here to Eternity While I am no stranger to potty humor, I am surprised how much more I now appreciate our poop after reading Flush. It's something that needs to be discussed more. Number 2 really should be number 1. --Nick Caruso, New York Times Bestselling Co-Author of Does It Fart? With humor, insight, and intestinal fortitude, Dr. Bryn Nelson persuades us that a 'shittier future' will be happier, healthier, and wealthier. Flush is a fascinating read. --Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction