Where Our Food Comes From
Retracing Nikolay Vavilov's Quest to End Famine
already been lost. But he also shows what resilient farmers and scientists in many regions are doing to save the remaining living riches of our world.
“Ethnobotanist Gary Nabhan has created something here as original as a new species: a book that is equal parts biography, pilgrimage, research, and revelation. Led around the planet by the ghost of his scientific and spiritual muse, Nabhan in turn leads us to a course of action we can actually perform: demand the food we were meant to eat. This moving, often harrowing, always eloquent account shows that by putting humanity back into ecology and vice-versa, much of this world could and would fall back into place.”
“Gary Nabhan’s travels in the footsteps of the brilliant Nikolay Vavilov make for fascinating reading. But this book is more than a journey into the past; it is look at the future. Vavilov’s compelling ideas about famine and Nabhan’s exploration of current threats to our food supply--from climate change to loss of biodiversity--make Where Our Food Comes From a must-read.”
“A riveting account of an extraordinary Russian plant scientist who traveled five continents in search of crop diversity and its importance in staving off famine, told by a master scientist and storyteller of today. Shining through the travels of both is a critical insight: that safeguarding our food supply depends ultimately on our ability to preserve the vitality of diverse cultures the world over.”
“Biology has its true martyr in N.I. Vavilov, starved to death by Stalin and his henchmen for his rich and necessary insights plus his indefatigable work devoted to discovering, cataloguing and storing the diversity among and within crop plants. By traveling himself, Gary Nabhan has given us a narrative of Vavilov’s physical and intellectual journey sure to keep readers up past bedtime.”
Chapter one: The Art Museum and the Seed Bank
Chapter two: The Hunger Artist and the Horn of Plenty
Chapter three: Melting Glaciers and Waves of Grain: The Pamirs
Chapter four: Drought and the Decline of Variety: The Po Valley
Chapter five: From Breadbasket to Basket Case: The Levant
Chapter six: Date Palm Oases and Desert Crops: The Maghreb
Chapter seven: Finding Food in Famine’s Wake: Ethiopia
Chapter eight: Apples and Boomtown Growth: Kazakhstan
Chapter nine: Rediscovering America and Surviving the Dust Bowl: The U.S. Southwest
Chapter ten: Logged Forests and Lost Seeds: The Sierra Amazon
Chapter eleven: Deep into the Tropical Forests of the Amazon
Chapter twelve: The Last Expedition
Epilogue
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
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