Seismologist Charlie Richter, grandson of the inventor of the Richter
scale, knows earthquakes, and has a method for predicting them. Arriving
in Los Angeles to begin work at the Center for Earthquake Studies, a
mysterious agency that seems more Hollywood than science, Charlie
settles into his new life. His only distraction from work is Grace, an
assistant to a powerful producer, and her deadbeat scriptwriter
boyfriend Ian.
It's only a matter of time before Charlie sees the Big One looming on
the horizon. When Charlie alerts his boss at the Center, he is the one
that's in for a shock: this is exactly what the Center was hoping for.
With the news leaked, everyone's suddenly looking to produce the next
disaster blockbuster. One of the few scripts Ian actually wrote, Ear to
the Ground, happens to be about an earthquake disaster, and soon it's
plucked from obscurity and given the fast track. But with a little bit
of luck, Charlie may just foil everybody's plans. He just needs
explosives, a helicopter, a little more time.
By award-winning writer and Los Angeles Times book critic David Ulin,
Ear to the Ground is a rollicking visit back to the 1990s.