Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Monday, November 5, 2012
Tomorrow's Table: A Book Review
Like many I have had questions and concerns about GMOs in the past. On the other hand I am keenly aware that standard farming and food production practices are not sufficient for feeding the future population growth, are causing serious environmental harm, and are (in the case of pesticides) hurting farm workers and consumers. So in my search over the past couple of years for accurate information on the subject I found this book: Tomorrow's Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food. I put off reading it for a while because, well, the word "genetics" is in the title. Yep. I know what you are thinking: "but you are married to a geneticist!" True, I am. But I also thought he was boring for the first two years of our acquaintance because he talked about genetics. Once I finally started reading it however, I was pleasantly surprised at how well it was written for the non-geneticist. In short, for the rest of us, it is a great way to start understanding the issues surrounding GMOs.
It is written by a plant geneticist and her husband, an organic farmer. In a very easy-to-read, story-like manner they take you through about a year of their lives and address many of the main points and concerns regarding GMOs along the way. Together they make a compelling argument for organic farming and the genetic engineering of plants, two things that most people view as complete opposites. What most people don't know is that they are both tools that can be used to help solve our biggest food production problems such as: too many pesticides and fertilizers (both bad for human health and environmental health), needing more food to be grown on less land, and withstanding droughts and floods. They are not end-all solutions to these serious problems, but useful tools that, if properly used, can be a great aid.
This book is the only thing I have read on the subject of GMOs that doesn't water the topic down to the point that it is inaccurate, nor does it use so many genetic specific terms that no one other than geneticists can understand it. It gives you the facts and asks you to draw conclusions. It doesn't use catch phrases to scare you or manipulate your emotions as many GMO foes have done. I finished it feeling that I could read other GMO information with a better understanding of the basics which allowed me to not just be told what to think (or scared into what to think) but really form my own conclusions.
I feel like this is a very important book for our time when the future of food and all that it affects is reaching such a critical point. For instance, during this election in California, Proposition 37 is on the ballot. In short terms the proposition, if passed, would require that all retail food items containing GMO foods, be so labeled. On the surface it is fine. More information for consumers. But if consumers are making choices based on ignorance, or worse, fear of what they don't understand, then it is not good for anyone. I am sure you have heard the common phrase: as California goes, so goes the nation. Which is why, now more than ever, we need to try to understand a bit about what GMOs really are and what they really mean for the world.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Half the Sky: A Book Review

I don't normally do book reviews on my blog but this last month I have read two books that resonated so loudly with me that I just have to share them with you. The first one was Half the Sky. I have heard about this book several times over the last few years but never got around to reading it. Honestly I was a little be afraid about reading an entire book about a topic as grim and heartbreaking as the injustices against women around the world.
I should have read this earlier.
This book tackles the widespread issues of sex slavery, mass rape as a weapon of war, maternal mortality, genital mutilation, and other topics that are so horrifying that we would rather just not think about them. However, it does not just describe the terrible situations and leave you feeling depressed and disgusted. As it addresses each issue the book also talks about improvements that are being made in each area. It talks about what strategies are working, and what doesn't, what hinders success in these efforts, and what helps. Rather than finishing this book with a sense of hopelessness, I finished uplifted and with a feeling of empowerment. I also left feeling like I could do more.
Read it. Just read it. You won't regret it at all. I am amazed at what educating and empowering women can do to decrease poverty and increase the health of nations.
Interesting fact: As states in the U.S. began granting women the right to vote the infant mortality rate dramatically decreased and the literacy rate dramatically increased in each of those states in the years immediately following. The reason? Politicians realized that they now had to pay attention to "women's issues" so they devoted more resources to these two areas.
What is my point? I will answer that with a quote from the book:
"The unfortunate reality is that women's issues are marginalized, and in any case sex trafficking and mass rape should no more be seen as women's issues than slavery was a black issue or the Holocaust was a Jewish issue. These are all humanitarian concerns, transcending any one race, gender, or creed."
We all benefit when women are granted education and true freedom.
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