Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

22 March 2008

Truck: A Love Story

Meg and I are book people; our apartment has piles of books everywhere. A recent addition to our blog is a Books We are Reading widget, in the left sidebar. If any of you see a book you're interested in and would like a preview, just give us a shout.

A while back we got an anonymous comment from someone who liked our blog and wanted to send us a copy of their book. Well, free books are good by us, so we emailed the guy and said we were interested. A bit later we got a big fat envelope in the mail and found this inside:



We both took turns reading the book and I volunteered to post a review to both show our appreciation and to share with you a truly good read. Thanks Mike.

The official Future House Farm book review:

Michael Perry’s Truck: A Love Story is a branching narrative that, in the time it takes to revitalize a 1951 International Harvester, explores the simple complexities of a midwest man in love. After reading his fetching novel I imagined him to be the type of fellow that leaves a key under the mat but never bothers to lock the door. He is a man who weeps at a sad song and can butcher a deer. By the end he leaves you feeling so comfortable and included that it would be possible to knock on his door unannounced and pick up where he left off. However, his approachability should not be mistaken for basic or elementary. His rolling images are generous, but they lay claim to a specific attention.

I admit that it took me about fifteen pages to understand the way Perry was going to present his story. Although the surface story is presented in monthly chapters, he breaks the predictability of a linear narrative with curious branching tales suitable for a front porch in a rural town. He shares smaller and sometimes more private stories from his growing up, which bridges to a richer understanding of why he is the way he is. At times it does feel that he may be going entirely out of his way to paint himself as a softy with a high powered rifle, but when he slips into the story of his unified laundry theory or the bachelor recipe board to explain the lengths he will go to eliminate life’s hassles, I understand that he really could be that Second Amendment sentimental.

If you’re looking for something with action, mystery, or complex plot twists, this is not the book you’re looking for. The narrative does have a level of sophistication worthy to entertain an academic, but the story is easy enough to follow for even the most sporadic of reading schedules. If a slow private talk is the read you desire, then this is a must for your reading list. Amidst the pages of rebuilding a truck and falling in love you’ll find yourself, surprisingly, learning a thing or two about gardening, rural living, and how to relax the right way.

18 February 2008

My Favorite Room


While the weather tries to make up it mind, Meg and I are forced to spend the better part of our days indoors. If we're not in the kitchen, we're in the library. This wasn't planned, it just kind of happened. Since we both majored in English, we have accumulated a shit load of books (there's another couple book cases around the corner). Subsequently, we needed a place to store them and when they were all put together, voila, a library was born. 

13 February 2008

The Sap is Rising

The other day I had the privilege to acquaint myself with a new blog on the blogosphere called Life at Dogfight Cove. They started the site this month, so this is a great opportunity to read it from the start. The writing is great; it's got a good home grown feel.

Polarbear's (she's the blogger) last post mentioned, amongst many other projects, pruning her fruit trees. This has been another reminder that the sap will be rising soon and the season for growing will soon be upon us. One of the projects that we really need to focus on in the coming weeks, like Polarbear, is the pruning of our adopted apple tree.


To be quite honest, we're feeling like our resources for this project may be a bit slim. Probably the most useful source I've found is a section on fruit tree pruning in the American Horticultural Society Encyclopedia of Gardening. I think we have a pretty good idea of how to do the cuttings, but which ones to cut is still a bit foggy.


Let's remember now that this tree hasn't been pruned in at least seven years. If we were to cut all of the branches suggested by the books we've read, we'd be left with nothing more than a stump. I know we should take it slow, so what branches should we look for to absolutely remove? I think we're leaning towards cutting all the branches that are rubbing and maybe just a spike or two from the middle. If you have any experience with this, please send it our way.

Cheers

17 January 2008

In the Kitchen



"[I]t was evident once again that, as a nation, our amnesia regarding how to cook is wasting food and costing us - and the environment - dear."

This is a line I swiped from a post I read a week ago on Hedgewizard's Diary. The post has to do with free-range chickens (which we obviously support), but I was really intrigued with this statement. Everything that we do in our gardens comes to fruition in the kitchen. I don't think Meg and I have really given the power of cooking enough attention when considering what we plan to harvest from our garden. Maybe because it's something we take for granted. I don't know. Shortly after I read Hedgewizard's post and went to the Pollan reading, we started talking about our cooking interests and habits.

Quite honestly, we don't use cooking books all that much. A lot of what I learned came from hanging out with family while meals were being prepared and working in restaurants while I waited for academia to produce something. We do love food. Food in our house is just as much for the experience as it is for the fuel, but we just have no desire to spend all evening cooking (unless it's slow cooking in the oven). The keys for us are simple recipes with fresh ingredients. Two books that I reference on occasion are The Professional Chef, 7th Ed. and the Food Lover's Companion. I mainly use the FLC when I run across ingredients that I'm not familiar with in TPC. The most helpful attribute of TPC is that the recipes for sauces and stocks are designed to be made in bulk. When we get into livestock and start to prepare our own meat, there are also some great tips for butchering and preparing these meats in large amounts. Putting Food By is a book we picked up last year in anticipation of doing a whole lot of canning and freezing this year.

I'm beginning to have a great deal of interest in food blogs lately and Meg and I plan to start adding them to our blog roll. I received a great recipe for rabbit from Steven at Dirt Sun Rain; I have been blown away with his knowledge in the kitchen, thanks Steven. The more we read, the more we learn about what we can do with food. So often I'm concerned with watching that I'm using less and not being wasteful, and I realize that a good deal can also be done if we pay attention not just to what we eat, but how we eat it. Meg and I are hoping to grow some amazing things this year and I can't wait to see how they turn out in the kitchen.

12 January 2008

Michael Pollan: Part Two


On Thursday we hopped a train to Philadelphia to see Michael Pollan speak and give a reading from In Defense of Food at the Free Library of Philadelphia. We got to the library an hour and a half early, but couldn't get inside because the library had closed for the day and was waiting to reopen at seven for the event. We were effectively the third and fourth people in line after two young women who had arrived ahead of us and were hanging out on the steps. By six o'clock there were easily two hundred people waiting. It was interesting to see what an obvious demographic turned out for the reading; at least 75% of the attendees were under 35 years old, and about the same percentage were urban hippies: Keens, Nalgene bottles, and thrift store cardigans were in abundance. We're rural hippies, so we had Keens, Nalgene bottles, and flannel shirts. We were all let in at quarter after six, and by six-thirty all seven hundred available seats were taken and the library staff had to start turning people away. The crowd was pretty amazing.

Before the event started I was a little bit concerned I'd be disappointed, because I thought (and still think) that the catchphrase for the book, "Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants," was a little cute. That line is being repeated ad nauseum on NPR, in reviews, and online, and even though it makes sense and all, it is a little too pat for my liking. His other writing is very much not like that, though. I've read The Botany of Desire and The Omnivore's Dilemma, in addition to some of his articles, and his other stuff seems well thought out and researched. My chief complaints with the two books I've read are that Pollan identifies and discusses a lot of problems inherent in the agricultural and food industries, not to mention the government, but he doesn't do very much in the way of offering alternatives. I know that he's technically a journalist, so it's not his obligation to give answers. But he's probably more intimate with the issues he writes about than most people are, so it almost seems like his duty to give us some sort of guidance. What's the best way to fix the farm bill? How do we get the government to subsidize the farmers who are doing good work? How do we get consumers to wrap their minds around the fact that in the end they pay a lot more than a dollar for that fast food value meal?

I don't know. Anyway, from Pollan's talk, it sounds like In Defense of Food will give a bit more direction, at least to individual consumers. Here are a couple highlights from his talk:

  • Foods are not "the sum of their nutrients," despite what Multi-Grain Omega-3 Heart-Healthy American Cancer Society Approved Cheerios might have you believe. For reasons we don't understand yet, eating a fish from the ocean (presumably one who was able to avoid the toxic, mercury-filled parts of the ocean) is a much better and more effective way to get omega-3s than by taking a supplement or eating fortified food. The beta carotene in a carrot will do a lot more for you than fortified Wheaties.
  • When sociologists look at food, they find that the health of a population has nothing to do with individual foods; rather it's contingent on the amount of whole foods that are eaten. Pollan talked about an African tribe that basically eats beef, cow's blood, milk, and a couple grains. They have virtually no chronic diseases, they live a long time, and they can withstand minor illnesses way better than the average Westerner. The same holds true for any group of people who are eating a very culturally based diet, whether it's Inuits eating seal blubber, South Americans eating beans and potatoes, or French people eating brie.
  • Speaking of Westerners, we have pretty much the crappiest diet in history, and immigrant populations who move to a Westernized area and start eating our junk food develop lots of health problems—high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity–very, very quickly. However, switching someone back to their native diet, or any diet of organic whole foods, completely reverses the problems they developed in, like, six weeks.
  • Crappy food is cheap food, thanks mainly to the completely disproportionate and nonsensical allocation of government subsidies. Next time you hear someone whine about people who accept welfare and government handouts, tell them to boycott Kraft, General Mills, Nestle, and the like. Processed food is cheap because of government incentives to produce monster quantities of nasty, genetically modified corn, ship it around the country, and cram it into every box of cereal, soda bottle, and frozen dinner. One dollar can buy you about 1500 calories of processed food; the same dollar can buy about 250 calories of fresh produce. It is not really more expensive to grow a carrot than to make a box of Hamburger Helper; the problem is that the carrot farmer doesn't get any help from the government. In fact he's got to pay the government if he wants to call his carrot organic.
  • I'm getting worked up.
  • A big factor in the rise of health problems in Westernized nations, especially the US, is that we don't cook anymore. If you go to the grocery store and buy bread, milk, vegetables, and meat, you're going to be a whole lot better off than if you go for a box or a bag in the freezer section. Sure, you can add too much salt or too much butter, but most people don't keep corn syrup and hydrogenated soybean oil and monosodium glutamate in their spice rack. On the whole, you'll fare much better if you cook your own food, especially if you buy organic ingredients.
  • And finally, a positive thought: the food industry is extremely sensitive to health scares and contamination, because of the awful publicity that such things bring. Basically, they're terrified of consumers. As an example, Pollan cited McDonalds' unadvertised use of genetically modified potatoes in the late 1990s. A few people learned about this and were rightly concerned, and they called and sent letters to the company. Less than 100 complaints was enough for McDonalds to reconsider, and lead to the eventual reverse of their use of GMO potatoes.
On the whole, Pollan was a very good speaker. He was engaging and funny, and he gave a lot of information. It made me eager to dig into the new book this weekend. It seems like it might serve as the missing last chapter of The Omnivore's Dilemma and take those ideas a little deeper, and I'm hoping to get a more complete picture of the whole food issue after reading it. After the talk, we ran upstairs to the book signing line with the three books we'd brought along. He happily signed them all and put a nice little book-specific note on each one: "To Meg and Kelly, fellow bumblebees," in Botany of Desire, "Vote with your fork!" in The Omnivore's Dilemma, and "Eat food," in In Defense of Food.


A podcast of the event is here. It is about an hour long, and I highly recommend listening to it whether you're familiar with Pollan's message or not.

Edited to add: Kickass Philly Blogger Albert "Dragonball" Yee has a very thorough write up of the reading here.

10 January 2008

Michael Pollan: Part One


Meg and I had the privilege to go to Michael Pollan's reading this evening at the Free Library of Philadelphia. Like our DC trip earlier this week, we have arrived home late and a little too bone-weary to give a proper post on the experience. We took notes and will say our what-have-yous tomorrow.

01 January 2008

Weary Travelers


Our holiday travels ended this evening. We just got back from spending a couple days with Meg's family after spending a week with mine. Between visiting relatives and friends we piled about 2,000 miles on the Jeep in a bit under two weeks.

While on our holiday adventure on both sides of Pennsylvania, we discovered that some of our family and friends have been green minded folk for decades and were filled with wonderful stories and tips. Along with the great conversation we also acquired some potentially useful reads. Some of the books are older, like Raising Small Livestock and Practical Homesteading, while others are more current like The Gardener's A-Z Guide to Growing Organic Food and a subscription to E Magazine. As we read each of these and the other great resources, we'll be sure to let you all know how they are.

Side note: To kind of build off of the post we had earlier on local vs. organic and the wonderful comments some of you all had left, please check out this post by Steven at Dirt Sun Rain and click over to the link he provided. I hope it's a joke.

Oh, and happy new year.

15 December 2007

A Little Land


I'm currently reading The Grapes of Wrath and the Joad family has just made their way into California. An image Steinbeck presents repeatedly is that land equals food. All they needed was a little piece of land with some water and they would be alright.

Meg and I are not in the same situation in any way; our reasons for gardening are to have a closer relationship with the earth and the food we eat (I'm sure there is a little politics sprinkled in there too). Yet, as I read what these folk had to go through (although it is fiction, it is based on fact), my appreciation for what we have and what we are able to achieve becomes so much more.

05 November 2007

The End Begins

As I may have mentioned at some point, Meg and I work in the field of academics. Meg is a professional writing center tutor and I am an adjunct English instructor. This Fall has actually been our first semester at our humble jobs and already I am feeling sad that it is almost over. I love my students. However, I received my Spring semester contract in the mail and it was a boost to think of the types of lessons I'll be teaching.

Much like the feelings I've been having about my classes, I have been a little bummed about the garden season coming to a close. It had certainly been a learning experience; there were some surprise yields from some plants and some devestating results from others. But, it hasn't taken long for Meg and I to start thinking of next years garden and we still have a good deal of our cold weather crops showing tremendous promise under our row covers. A lot of our ideas are just brainstorms, but we will definitely be re-utilizing John Jeavons's How to Grow More Vegetables Than You Ever Thought Possible on Less Land Than You Can Imagine.

If you have a small garden and you want to get the most out of it, while being completely organic of course, than you must reference this book. We used it for the first time this year and the results were good and it was a whole lot of fun.