ggchickapee
Portland
A review of this — 47 weeks ago
Popular author, Barbara Kingsolver, and her family made the decision to spend one full year “eating locally” – primarily by raising their own food – and to write about their experience in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle. Kingsolver wrote the main narrative; her husband, Steven Hopp, provided nerdy, information-packed sidebars; and her teenage daughter Camille covered the nutritional angle and recipes.
Kingsolver is a talented writer and she makes a year of gardening and poultry husbandry entertaining and even, at times, fascinating – her descriptions of natural turkey procreation are enough in themselves to make the book worthwhile. She augments the “life on the family farm” memoir with stories of family road trips, holiday and birthday celebrations, her second honeymoon in Italy, and general reminiscences. She makes an excellent culinary case for eating what local food is in season, only when it is season.
Unfortunately, Kingsolver and crew also lard the book with offputting lectures about “food politics” and “ethical” food choices, disparaging opposing views. I am all for eating locally grown produce, meat, poultry, and fish. I am fortunate enough to live in Oregon, a state with natural bounty enough to keep me fat and happy year round. This local food is fresher and tastes better than the same types of things shipped in from half-way around the world. And I am happy to support Oregon’s always anemic, now suffering economy.
But Kingsolver and Hopp’s holier-than-thou attitude about eating local food rubs me the wrong way. They beat the readers over the head with dire warnings about the imminent catastrophe of global warming, large-scale agriculture, and Big Oil, always following the party line to the letter. Whether they are right or wrong, they are boring. Nobody likes a scold. I found myself arguing with them even when I agreed with them, just because they got my back up with all their bossing.
Posted on Rose City Reader.

Comments
Boris Mann
Vancouver
Less preachy than other books
Have you read “In Defense of Food” by Michael Pollan? That is one entire book that is pedantry, even if he is right. So I actually think this was much more story based than other such books, and is more of a guide that pure “danger! danger!”. I especially enjoyed the section on cheese making – I’m going to try that myself.
I agree that not everyone has a semi-rural location where they can do they everything themselves, and that she might have pointed out ways that we can do it ourselves at home – but it’s a work of fiction, not a manual, so she told her story.
The reason that Kingsolver may come across as strident or preachy is because in her research she’s soon some scary stuff. But she’s RIGHT. We (i.e. the earth) are totally screwed if we don’t start focusing on making our local food ecosystems work.
Eating a banana IS a big deal. Heck, even putting stuff in the fridge is a big deal when you start looking at where / how the energy is generated.