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record 1 of 1 for search "07062778{001}"
Animal, vegetable, miracle : a year of food life
    Kingsolver, Barbara.
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers,
Pub date: c2007.
Pages: 370 p. :
ISBN: 9780060852559
Item info: 34 copies available at CENTREVILLE REGIONAL, CHANTILLY REGIONAL, DOLLEY MADISON, GREAT FALLS, GEORGE MASON REGIONAL, JOHN MARSHALL, KINGSTOWNE, KINGS PARK, LORTON, MARTHA WASHINGTON, PATRICK HENRY, POHICK REGIONAL, RICHARD BYRD, SHERWOOD REGIONAL, THOMAS JEFFERSON, BURKE CENTRE, and OAKTON.
73 copies total in all locations. 
Holdings Change Display
BURKE CENTRE Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Checked out
  1 Book Shelves
CENTREVILLE REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 3 Book Checked out
  3 Book Shelves
CHANTILLY REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 2 Book Checked out
  1 Book Shelves
DOLLEY MADISON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
CITY OF FAIRFAX REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 5 Book Checked out
GEORGE MASON REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 3 Book Checked out
  1 Book In transit
  4 Book Shelves
GREAT FALLS Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 2 Book Shelves
JOHN MARSHALL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 2 Book Shelves
KINGS PARK Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 3 Book Shelves
KINGSTOWNE Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
  1 Book Checked out
LORTON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 2 Book Shelves
MARTHA WASHINGTON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
OAKTON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
  1 Book In transit
PATRICK HENRY Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 2 Book Checked out
  1 Book Shelves
POHICK REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 8 Book Shelves
  2 Book Checked out
RESTON REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 6 Book Checked out
RICHARD BYRD Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
SHERWOOD REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 4 Book Checked out
  1 Book Shelves
THOMAS JEFFERSON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Shelves
  1 Book Checked out
TYSONS-PIMMIT REGIONAL Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 6 Book Checked out
WOODROW WILSON Copies Material Location
630.1 K 2007 1 Book Checked out
Summary
When Kingsolver and her family move from suburban Arizona to rural Appalachia, they take on a new challenge: to spend a year on a locally produced diet, paying close attention to the provenance of all they consume. "Our highest shopping goal was to get our food from so close to home, we'd know the person who grew it. Often that turned out to be ourselves as we learned to produce what we needed, starting with dirt, seeds, and enough knowledge to muddle through. Or starting with baby animals, and enough sense to refrain from naming them." Animal, Vegetable, Miracle follows the family through the first year of their experiment. They find themselves eager to move away from the typical food scenario of American families: a refrigerator packed with processed, factory-farmed foods transported long distances using nonrenewable fuels. In their search for another way to eat and live, they begin to recover what Kingsolver considers our nation's lost appreciation for farms and the natural processes of food production. American citizens spend less of their income on food than has any culture in the history of the world, but pay dearly in other ways -- losing the flavors, diversity and creative food cultures of earlier times. The environmental costs are also high, and the nutritional sacrifice is undeniable: on our modern industrial food supply, Americans are now raising the first generation of children to have a shorter life expectancy than their parents. Believing that most of us have better options available, Kingsolver and her family set out to prove for themselves that a local diet is not just better for the economy and environment but also better on the table. Their search leads them through a season of planting, pulling weeds, expanding their kitchen skills, harvesting their own animals, joining the effort to save heritage crops from extinction, and learning the time-honored rural art of getting rid of zucchini. Inspired by the flavors and culinary arts of a local food culture, they explore farmers' markets and diversified organic farms at home and across the country, discovering a booming movement with devotees from the Deep South to Alaska. Part memoir, part journalistic investigation, and complete with original recipes, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle makes a passionate case for putting the kitchen back at the center of family life, and diversified farms at the center of the American diet. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
Starred Review. [Signature]Reviewed by Nina PlanckMichael Pollan is the crack investigator and graceful narrator of the ecology of local food and the toxic logic of industrial agriculture. Now he has a peer. Novelist Kingsolver recounts a year spent eating home-grown food and, if not that, local. Accomplished gardeners, the Kingsolver clan grow a large garden in southern Appalachia and spend summers "putting food by," as the classic kitchen title goes. They make pickles, chutney and mozzarella; they jar tomatoes, braid garlic and stuff turkey sausage. Nine-year-old Lily runs a heritage poultry business, selling eggs and meat. What they don't raise (lamb, beef, apples) comes from local farms. Come winter, they feast on root crops and canned goods, menus slouching toward asparagus. Along the way, the Kingsolver family, having given up industrial meat years before, abandons its vegetarian ways and discovers the pleasures of conscientious carnivory.This field local food and sustainable agriculture is crowded with books in increasingly predictable flavors: the earnest manual, diary of an epicure, the environmental battle cry, the accidental gardener. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle is all of these, and much smarter. Kingsolver takes the genre to a new literary level; a well-paced narrative and the apparent ease of the beautiful prose makes the pages fly. Her tale is both classy and disarming, substantive and entertaining, earnest and funny. Kingsolver is a moralist ("the conspicuous consumption of limited resources has yet to be accepted widely as a spiritual error, or even bad manners"), but more often wry than pious. Another hazard of the genre is snobbery. You won't find it here. Seldom do paeans to heirloom tomatoes (which I grew up selling at farmers' markets) include equal respect for outstanding modern hybrids like Early Girl.Kingsolver has the ear of a journalist and the accuracy of a naturalist. She makes short, neat work of complex topics: what's risky about the vegan diet, why animals belong on ecologically sound farms, why bitterness in lettuce is good. Kingsolver's clue to help greenhorns remember what's in season is the best I've seen. You trace the harvest by botanical development, from buds to fruits to roots. Kingsolver is not the first to note our national "eating disorder" and the injuries industrial agriculture wreaks, yet this practical vision of how we might eat instead is as fresh as just-picked sweet corn. The narrative is peppered with useful sidebars on industrial agriculture and ecology (by husband Steven Hopp) and recipes (by daughter Camille), as if to show that local food in the growing, buying, cooking, eating and the telling demands teamwork. (May)Nina Planck is the author of Real Food: What to Eat and Why (Bloomsbury USA, 2006). Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
School Library Journal Review
Adult/High School This book chronicles the year that Barbara Kingsolver, along with her husband and two daughters, made a commitment to become locavores those who eat only locally grown foods. This first entailed a move away from their home in non-food-producing Tuscon to a family farm in Virginia, where they got right down to the business of growing and raising their own food and supporting local farmers. For teens who grew up on supermarket offerings, the notion not only of growing one's own produce but also of harvesting one's own poultry was as foreign as the concept that different foods relate to different seasons. While the volume begins as an environmental treatise the oil consumption related to transporting foodstuffs around the world is enormous it ends, as the year ends, in a celebration of the food that physically nourishes even as the recipes and the memories of cooks and gardeners past nourish our hearts and souls. Although the book maintains that eating well is not a class issue, discussions of heirloom breeds and making cheese at home may strike some as high-flown; however, those looking for healthful alternatives to processed foods will find inspiration to seek out farmers' markets and to learn to cook and enjoy seasonal foods. Give this title to budding Martha Stewarts, green-leaning fans of Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth (Rodale, 2006), and kids outraged by Eric Schlosser's Fast Food Nation (Houghton, 2001). Jenny Gasset, Orange County Public Library, CA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information

Full View From Catalog
key: 07062778
LCCN: 2006053516
ISBN: 9780060852559
ISBN: 0060852550
Local Dewey call num: 630.1 K 2007
Local call number: 74 RUSH
Personal Author: Kingsolver, Barbara.
Title: Animal, vegetable, miracle : a year of food life / Barbara Kingsolver, with Steven L. Hopp and Camille Kingsolver ; original drawings by Richard A. Houser.
Edition: 1st ed.
Publication info: New York : HarperCollins Publishers, c2007.
Physical descrip: 370 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Personal subject: Kingsolver, Barbara.
Personal subject: Hopp, Steven L., 1954-
Subject term: Farm life--Appalachian Region, Southern--Anecdotes.
Subject term: Country life--Appalachian Region, Southern--Anecdotes.
Subject term: Agriculture--Appalachian Region, Southern--Anecdotes.
Subject term: Food habits--Appalachian Region, Southern--Anecdotes.
Added author: Hopp, Steven L., 1954-
Added author: Kingsolver, Camille, 1987-
892: lm
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