
I read
Prodigal Summer by
Barbara Kingsolver a few weeks ago, which brought up the issues of pesticides, organic farming, hunting and poaching, etc. Definitely an absorbing read.
Although the environment is not as central a focus in
A Thousand Acres by
Jane Smiley, it was still fascinating to read about struggling farmers in Iowa, which I finished about a week ago. Of course the deeper issues involved were enough to turn me on my head for a few days, but that's beside the point.
If you read non-fiction, Barbara Kingsolver has a book about how her family lived on locally produced food for a year.
Animal, Vegetable, MiracleWendell Berry has several books on how to live organically & why it is necessary.
On the subject of nonfiction
The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan is fairly mindboggling
Message edited by its author, Feb 14, 2008, 9:27pm.
Not necessarily environmental, but certainly relevant to conventional agriculture and sustainable (or not) farming practices.
Fast Food Nation. Read it and I dare you to ever eat conventional meat again...
Both of the Barbara Kingsolver books mentioned are also wonderful, and
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle definitely got me more excited about gardening and buying more local food.
David Brin's
Earth. It is set a couple of decades in the future, and it describes a world that just barely squeaked by an ecological catastrophe. It's full of little notes about the changes that were made and how some problems were dealt with. I thought it was unreasonably optimistic, and that worries me.
I would recommend
Diet for a Small Planet by
Frances Moore Lappe. This book was given to me by my college roommate (a nutrition major) many years ago and introduced me to the idea of sustainable farming. I know it has been mentioned as an inspiration by many environmentalists/food writers.
The first I read on the topic was
Silent Spring by
Rachel Carson. (How sweet is that, read a book and talk to the teacher about it for extra credit in High School Biology.) And yeah, it definitely had an effect.
Anything by Derrick Jensen.
Specifically
Strangely Like War. But any of his books provide great insight into the destructive nature of our culture on our ecosystems.
The book that made me (and, I suspect, many other adolescent males back in the mid-sixties) aware of the concept of "ecology" was
Frank Herbert's
Dune.
I share several eye-opening read experiences mentioned above. Here are six more:
1491 by Charles c. Mann ought to be taught in all schools. Wow did it ever make me think, and changed the way I look at several things.
Women's Work, the First 20 000 Years: Women, Cloth and Society in Early Times by Elizabeth Wayland Barber changed how I look at a lot of history and anthropological theories on prehistoric life.
Wild Law: A manifesto For Earth Justice by Cormac Cullinen had me do an about-face on the label of Environmental Rights. I will never recover.
Animal Rights: The Inhumane Crusade by
Daniel T. Oliver scared me, opened my eyes to what I had caught glimpses of in the movement when I was in it - and what drove me away from it. I consider this a must-read, too.
Rural Rites: Hunting and the Politics of Prejudice by respected investigative reporter
Charlie Pye-Smith continues on the same theme, and ties in with
Wild law. My stomach churned and I got angry at how corrupt the political systems are, and how they will so desperately, blatently, abuse science like how Pye-Smith reveals was done on this issue.
And
Water: A natural History by
Alice Outwater. Even if you read only the first two chapters, you will NEVER look at landscape the same way, again. WOW!
Shastan
Message edited by its author, Oct 3, 2008, 8:38am.
The Fire Eternal by
Chris D'Laceyits the fourth book in the Fire Eternal series, and though it is fiction, enviromental things happen in the book. then i realized they kinda are happenin with the weather in my area lately. it can be 34 degrees one day and 96 the next! unpredictable!
I'm currently reading
The World Without Us by Alan Weisman which is about what would happen to the world if humans simply vanished. It's a captivating read and really makes you think about your place on Earth.
The Culture of Make Believe by Derrick Jensen was an eye-opener for me, not only environmentally by culturally.
Message edited by its author, Oct 1, 2009, 6:35pm.
Not too long ago I read
Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv. Very interesting.
Another interesting one, a bit older, is
The Natural Alien: Humankind and Environment by Neil Evernden.
Totally agree has made me really conscious of eating food in season and as local as possible
I love this book and the interwoven tales. The environmental message about the health of the highest level carnivores was interesting too
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