[Elmore offers] unaccustomed perspectives on a company whose leading product is a household name around the globe...I doubt the Coca-Cola Co. will much like it. -- Marc Levinson - Wall Street Journal
What Elmore does best is analyze how Coke takes advantage of global public works and government interventions to boost its place in world markets...Citizen Coke began as a dissertation, and its points are lucid and logically presented; the language is accessible, and punchy chapter endings propel the story. -- Beth Macy - New York Times Book Review
As the soda wars heat up, this book is an indispensable resource. -- Michael Pollan
Coca-Cola is one of the most powerful economic institutions of our time, but its social and ecological impacts remain understudied. Now, in the hands of a talented young historian, corporate capitalism gets the attention it deserves in a careful dissection of the material underpinnings of the world's most valuable brand. Citizen Coke will cause you to drink less and think more. -- Ted Steinberg, author of Gotham Unbound: The Ecological History of Greater New York
Citizen Coke is a brilliant analysis of Coke's empire in ecological, economic, and social terms. It allows us to see the contours of an economy based on partnerships between governments and corporations like Coca-Cola. It makes us conscious of the giant ecological footprint of the Real Thing, which impacts the real lives of real people. If you want a deeper understanding of our world today, read Citizen Coke. -- Vandana Shiva, author of Stolen Harvest: The Hijacking of the Global Food Supply
A fascinating, thought-provoking approach to Coca-Cola history through the drink's primary ingredients-water, sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, coca leaf, caffeine-and the glass, plastic, and aluminum that contain them. -- Mark Pendergrast, author of For God, Country & Coca-Cola