Selected Product: | The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals (Large Print Press) Large Print Author: Michael Pollan Publisher: Large Print Press Release Date: 2007-04-24 ISBN-10: 1594132054 ISBN-13: 9781594132056 List Price: $14.95 Average Customer Rating: | | The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World ISBN-10: 0375760393 ISBN-13: 9780375760396 List Price:$15.00 Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition, and Health, Revised and Expanded Edition (California Studies in Food and Culture) ISBN-10: 0520254031 ISBN-13: 9780520254039 List Price:$16.95 Second Nature: A Gardener's Education ISBN-10: 0802140114 ISBN-13: 9780802140111 List Price:$14.00 Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal: War Stories From the Local Food Front ISBN-10: 0963810952 ISBN-13: 9780963810953 List Price:$23.95 A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder ISBN-10: 0385319908 ISBN-13: 9780385319904 List Price:$16.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals (Large Print Press) by Michael Pollan (ISBN-10: 1594132054, ISBN-13: 9781594132056). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals (Large Print Press) by Michael Pollan (ISBN-10: 1594132054, ISBN-13: 9781594132056). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The bestselling author of The Botany of Desire explores the ecology of eating to unveil why we consume what we consume in the twenty-first century.
Unabridged CDs -11 CDs, 13 hours You'll never eat the same way again! | Customer Rating: | | This is a non-fiction account of the history behind the food we eat. This book describes the great industrial food complex and advocates local, organic foods. Extremely well-researched and well-presented. This was a compelling book and will likely convince you to change your eating habits. | A real education! | Customer Rating: | | Pollan presents this discussion in an easy-to-read format and gives the reader a well-rounded story. I highly recommend this book and hope that more agriculture schools and nutrition classes use it in the classroom. | Corn and its byproducts | Customer Rating: | This book contains a clear accounting of the farming of corn and the use of corn to make corn syrup and other corn products used in human foods, and the problem with the destruction of farming soil and pollution of the environment with fertilizers used to increase the yield per acre of corn. The Author does not address the problem with adding corn by-products to our dog and cat foods, among which are the basic indigestibility of corn in these animals, and the problem of pet illness that results from the feeding of pet foods with corn products in them. This is a great book. To learn more about pet nutrition please go to www.amiespetcuisine.com, and see HOW TO COOK FOR YOUR PET. | Calling all Corn People - READ THIS BOOK! | Customer Rating: | I read this book a little while ago and didn't have time to review it, but the essential messages keep popping into my consciousness as I go about my day-to-day life. Before reading this book, for example, I had never realized that Corn has cunningly taken over the world and turned us all into "Corn People." Pollan's simple plan - to make three meals - turns into an exploration of all things wrong with the modern industrial food production and delivery system. Pollan's prose is wonderful and his thinking nothing short of brilliant. Even if some of his ideas are not completely original, as some critical reviews argue, this is still a remarkable book that will enrich your life - and the world, if enough people read it. | How an omnivore became a carnivore ! | Customer Rating: | This is a fascinating book on how we eat, how our food companies feed us and how the ruthless business efficiency of corporations has created an expoitative food chain with tremendous social, economic, environmental, health and moral problems for us now to resolve. Michael Pollen describes the genesis of four meals and how government policies, marketing by food corporations, restaurants and insatiable demands by the consumer has created this unsustainable food chain in which every one is suffering:the land, the animals, environment, the consumer. As epidemics of obesity, type II diabetes, heart disease and cancer rage in America everybody is searching for an answer. Unfortunately Michael Pollen's book does not succinctly provide that answer (although it does make some oblique reference to it)
Homo sapiens came out of the jungles about 10,000 years ago and started agriculture and domesticating animals, but for millions of years before we were hunter-gatherers. Males hunted animals and failed nine out of ten times and the family survived on whatever the female and children gathered with their bare hands: fruits, roots, seeds, succulent leaves. So how does this biologic omnivore become an industrial age carnivore eating meat at each and every meal? and how did we end up eating far more than we need to? We have been eating meat for ages, but meat was expensive until the beginning of 20th century. We ate predominantly a relatively unprocessed plant based diet with some meat every now and then. People did physical hard work to earn a living and used up the calories they consumed. There was no significant heart disease in the 19th century. So the real dilemma is how to turn this gluttonous carnivore back into a true biologic omnivore. This book highlights that vexing issue of today. That is my take from this book. |
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