Nov 16, 2016 19:41
I’d like to be able to whole-heartedly recommend Rob Dunn’s Never Out of Season: Why Having the Food We Want When We Want It Threatens Our Food Supply and Our Future, because I think it’s got an important and thought-provoking message; certainly in my post-apocalyptic imaginings I had not spent much time contemplating the possibility of a vast famine (followed probably by a vast pestilence, given that the malnourished survivors will be easy prey for disease) caused by some pest destroying our increasingly homogeneous genetically modified crops, in much the same way that the potato blight caused the Irish potato famine.
The Irish potato famine was as devastating as it was in part because the potatoes themselves were so close to genetically identical: they all came from a very few ancestors imported to Europe from the Americas. Naturally, human beings learned nothing from this, and instead of diversifying have spent the last century narrowing down the crops we grow to the few highest-producing varieties of just a few plants.
Never Out of Season is a cri de coeur for us to embrace and protect crop diversity before it’s too late, and it’s, well, it’s just a bit repetitive. It could have made a kickass magazine article but as a book, each chapter is just a further repetition of this theme - not even really an elaboration of it; just variations of the same story where a lack of crop diversity leads to disaster.
Although I did find the story of the scientists in the Leningrad seed bank during the siege quite touching. There they are, surrounded by bags of rice and barley and wheat, succumbing to diseases brought on by malnutrition because they’re stoically saving their seed collection for the future.
In any case, there’s a great seed for an apocalypse story in here. Or a post-apocalyptic paean to crop diversity, centered around the characters working their polycultural garden and feasting upon the fruits of their labors.
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