Another audiobook; even speeded up, I find these hard to enjoy as much as reading. Still, Rivkid 2.0 demands a lot of walking, so it’s better than nothing. Anyway, the medium clearly affects my reaction, which was mixed. Pollan organizes the book, which is basically about the absence of many ethical ways to eat in the modern US, into four meals – industrial (McDonald’s), industrial organic (Whole Foods), pastoral (a Virginia farm that isn’t strictly organic but is almost entirely self-sustaining), and hunter-gatherer (food he and his friends mainly retrieved from the wild themselves). There’s a lot of repetition, as if Pollan doesn’t trust us to remember earlier chapters.

The first two sections are the strongest and most informative parts of the book. Pollan persuasively argues that deeply misguided policies have led us to become “corn chips on legs” – various manipulations of the market have made corn and its coconspirator soy so cheap that they’re used in everything, even as farmers become ever poorer and more marginalized. Corn is a commodity fed to cattle (who should be eating grass, and whose flesh is unhealthy for us if it’s corn-fed), split into fractions and highly processed (contributing to obesity as well as our vast consumption of fossil fuels), and produced in monocultures that require increasing amounts of fossil fuel-derived fertilizer. Corn is cheap only in dollars; the environment, our food security, our health, and our land suffer for it. Industrial organic solves only a few of the problems created by the industrial model of food production, since it still involves monocultures, factory farming, and transporting food 1500 miles cross-country in trucks. Though Pollan clearly thinks industrial organic is only a few steps better than regular industrial, he also sets forth the tradeoffs in terms of accessibility and cost – it’s much easier to get and sell industrial organic food than pastoral food as the world is set up now.

Pastoral production is the ideal, and idyll, of the book, but unfortunately Pollan doesn’t offer much of an affirmative program for giving more people access to it – the hero-farmer of the book just wishes New York City would disappear. As a result of this book, I’m going to try to buy more locally produced foods, even if they aren’t organic, but I wanted much more information about what individuals and policymakers should be doing to stop borrowing from the future to feed our faces today.

From: [identity profile] batdina.livejournal.com


I can't tell you whether hearing the book versus reading it matters much, though I tend to have the same response to books on tape that you do. Nevertheless, your overall response to the book mirrors mine in its entirety.

From: [identity profile] boniblithe.livejournal.com


Mine too. Although I did experience a fleeting desire to go live with the farmer's chickens in the mobile chicken shack. Those chickens certainly sounded like they had a better life than me.

From: [identity profile] amandajane5.livejournal.com


My sister now gets weekly deliveries from that farm since reading the book. The food has been good, but it all seems like such a hassle to me! I'm glad my neice and nephew are getting such good food, but it all seems like so much trouble.

From: [identity profile] thisficklemob.livejournal.com


I just read this a couple weeks ago, and enjoyed it a lot. I can see the validity in your critique, and think, yeah, it would have been nice if... But overall I found him just such a fun writer to read – by which I mean, his prose was entertaining and often unexpected – that I felt like how he was saying it mattered as much as what he was talking about. I mean, he made corn biology and industrial corn production fascinating, and that's nothing to sneeze at.

I also liked that the book didn't put me off anything, as I worried it might. He went into the belly of the production beast, but didn't come out saying he'd never eat McDonald's/Whole Foods/meat again, or making you feel that way. Although, it's been perhaps five years since I've eaten McDonald's... maybe this book particularly appealed to me because it validated some of my own predispositions, and made me feel even better about buying local milk and produce.

For resources for local eating, I recommend LocalHarvest.Org (http://www.localharvest.org/), which lets you search my location and type of resource you want: farms, farmer's markets, restaurants, grocery stores, CSAs, etc. The info isn't always complete, but there's usually at least contact info for someone who can provide it. (It also lets you order things from across the country, which kind of defeats the purpose of local in my mind, but anyway.)

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Thanks for the link! It really is a matter of effort, and I wish it weren't so hard to eat more local foods; I went to a local organic market this past weekend and had more local options than available at Whole Foods, but still not a lot.

From: [identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com


I haven't read the book, but just reading Fast Food Nation a few years ago made me want to eat less industrially-produced food. But it is hard -- I actually moved to the town with the all-year farmer's market, but I still can't get milk, cream or butter without going to a grocery, and shopping for eggs or meat is very *very* expensive.

the hero-farmer of the book just wishes New York City would disappear

Which crap, because what makes civilization *is* cities. But it would be nice if the local area could support the city more fully. I think you'd have to change the economy from the ground up to really reform things, though.

Have you heard about the 100 Mile Diet (http://www.100milediet.org/)? It isn't the easiest thing to manage, and I think it works best if you are a part of a couple with at least one member having a lot of time to do things like baking and canning.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


I hadn't heard about that, and it's as Pollan says: we wouldn't just have to reorganize our eating to live this way, we'd have to reorganize our lives. Government policies could help with this, but in their absence -- and with policies affirmatively working against eating local/organic -- small steps are really all I can imagine us taking. I switched to organic when I had my first child, and it's depressing that there are still so many problems with industrial organic. The market I found this weekend had dairy from grass-fed cattle, which I look forward to trying once I can eat dairy again.

From: [identity profile] vivwiley.livejournal.com


I haven't yet had an opportunity to read Omnivore's Dilemma, although I've seen some experts and talked with several folks who have. However, I have listened to this podcast (http://www.siconversations.org/shows/detail1234.html) which is a response by the CEO of Whole Foods to Michael Pollen (it's part of a series of conversations sponsored by the Stanford Social Innovation Review). I'm not sure it provides a lot more answers, but it is, in places, an interesting take on what a corporation is doing to try to respond to some of the market and policy issues.

Hope all is well.

From: [identity profile] rivkat.livejournal.com


Thanks for the link! I don't know if you've seen this, but the CEO has gotten in trouble recently for posting pro-Whole Foods messages in Yahoo! Finance under a sockpuppet identity. FIAWOL, indeed.
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