Request this book!!!
In this enchanting narrative part memoir, part botany primer, part
political manifesto Ray, author of the acclaimed Ecology of a Cracker
Childhood, and lately returning to her childhood obsession with farming,
has a mission: to inspire us with her own life to "understand food at
its most elemental... the most hopeful thing in the world. It is a seed.
In the era of dying, it is all life." Ray is inspired by the eccentric,
impassioned, generous characters she visits and interviews, gardeners
and farmers who populate the quietly radical world of seed savers, from
Vermonter Sylvia Davatz, self-proclaimed "Imelda Marcos of seeds, "' to
the more phlegmatic Bill Keener of Rabin Gap, Ga., who gives Ray two
20-inch cobs of Keener corn, grown by his family for generations, as
well as Greasy Back beans and some rotten Box Car Willy tomatoes to save
for seed. Despite the book's occasional tendency toward polemic, avid
gardeners will relish recognizing their idiosyncratic, revolutionary
sides in its pages, and it's likely to strike a spark in gardening
novices. Even couch potatoes will be enthralled by Ray's intimate,
poetically conversational stories of her encounters with the "lovely,
whimsical, and soulful things happen in a garden, leaving a gardener
giddy." Agent: Sam Stoloff, Frances Goldin Literary Agency. (Aug.)
Copyright 2012 Reed Business Information. Publishers Weekly (06/04/2012)
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