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Aug 04, 2009hadley rated this title 2.5 out of 5 stars
A book on an important subject that I wish were better written. Pawlick describes how the industrialization of food production has resulted in cheaper food, but at a high cost that includes lower nutrition, taste, and variety; environmental degradation; rampant food toxins; and the destruction of the family farm, to name just a few of the horrors he details. His arguments would carry more weight if they weren't so strident; he seems incapable of writing "corporation" without preceding it with "greedy", and he sees a heartless conspirator behind every suit. For such a short book, there are a lot of lengthy quotes from source materials, including one that runs over 3 pages. I like his idea of planting a garden as an "act of subversion", but his suggestion that we fight the multinational domination of the food supply by growing our own food or only buying it from local farmers' markets just isn't practical for a time-strapped North American, especially one in a country where nothing grows for 6 months. Redeemed a little by an excellent annotated bibliography. Paul Roberts' book by the same name (The End of Food) covers much of the same territory with the same sense of urgency, but minus the near-hysterical tone.