Promotions - Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles 2019 -

Farming While Black : Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide To Liberation On The Land
 ISBN: 9781603587617Price: 34.95  
Volume: Dewey: 630.68Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-10-30 
LCC: 2018-027631LCN: HD1476.U6P46 2018Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Penniman, LeahSeries: Publisher: Chelsea Green PublishingExtent: 368 
Contributor: Washington, KarenReviewer: David G. EmbrickAffiliation: University of ConnecticutIssue Date: July 2019 
Contributor:     

This text, written by an activist and farmer, is a tour de force commentary on black liberation and farming. The 16 chapters and introduction run readers through an array of historical and sociological background and practical guidance. Penniman begins with advice for those interested in becoming growers: acquiring resources and business planning, seed keeping, and urban farming. She extends further guidance to those concerned with social justice: healing, movement building, and uprooting racism. Along the way, Penniman holds nothing back, offering no apologies for reintroducing what is often left out of other scholarly books on farming: homage to our ancestors, correcting falsehoods about farming, and confronting colonial US history and current racism head on. In her overview of her own personal miseducation about agriculture, Penniman includes many of the scholars denied in traditional academic settings, such as Malcolm X, Booker T. Whatley, and George Washington Carver. The beauty of this book can be found in the inserts of the chapters that feature inspiring stories about real-life community successes, or that highlight racial justice programs, scholarships, or advice ranging from the legalities of agriculture business to decision-making.Summing Up: Highly recommended. Undergraduates and general readers.

Feeding Cahokia : Early Agriculture In The North American Heartland
 ISBN: 9780817320058Price: 59.95  
Volume: Dewey: 338.109773/89Grade Min: Publication Date: 2019-01-15 
LCC: 2018-021210LCN: S444.F75 2019Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Fritz, Gayle J.Series: Archaeology of Food Ser.Publisher: University of Alabama PressExtent: 232 
Contributor: Reviewer: Michael J. O'BrienAffiliation: Texas A&M University-San AntonioIssue Date: June 2019 
Contributor:     

This is an excellent book that examines a topic with deep roots in American archaeology: the role of agriculture in the rapid growth, florescence, and decline of Cahokia Mounds, the largest prehistoric population center north of Mexico. As Fritz (emer., Washington Univ.) points out, numerous debates surround this topic. For years, the archaeological story maintained that Cahokia's ruling class governed via a wealth distribution system that relied mainly on corn grown by the lowest classes of society. Fritz sees this as a vastly oversimplified scenario that misrepresents the status of farmers, who were primarily women and girls of various socioeconomic levels. Further, the narrow focus on corn as the primary crop overlooks the abundant evidence that numerous other plants, including knotweed, chenopodium, and maygrass, were major contributors to the Cahokia diet. Fritz puts that diet in excellent perspective by examining the archaeobotanical record for the several thousand years prior to the rise of Cahokia. Twenty-two color plates add substantially to the text, and each chapter concludes with recipes for preparing the plants discussed. What fun!Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.

Gardens And Gardening In Early Modern England And Wales
 ISBN: 9780300232080Price: 50.00  
Volume: Dewey: 635.094209/031Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-07-31 
LCC: 2017-954634LCN: SB453.3Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Francis, JillSeries: Publisher: Yale University PressExtent: 412 
Contributor: Reviewer: Susan Clare ScottAffiliation: McDaniel CollegeIssue Date: March 2019 
Contributor:     

Lavishly illustrated with photographs, prints, paintings, treatises, drawings, sketches, and plans, this wonderful book "sets out to explore what early modern gardeners were doing in their gardens." But it does much more than that. Looking beyond the well-researched, grand creations of the upper nobility, its focus is on the "more ordinary gardens of the rural county gentry." The viewpoint throughout reflects that of a contemporary garden owner, a novel approach Francis, an independent scholar, handles masterfully. Among the topics discussed are available texts of the time period, social and historical contexts, the gardeners themselves and their sites, artificial and natural plants and designs, and two appendixes: a transcript of Thomas Hammer's essay on gardening and a chronology of garden literature published circa 1558-1660. Francis provides an egalitarian analysis that takes into account "the concerns, anxieties, hopes, and aspirations of people at the time." Exhaustive notes, a list of illustrations, and a select bibliography of primary and secondary sources present to the reader a comprehensive study of this delightful subject. Essential for students, connoisseurs, and scholars of world garden history.Summing Up: Essential. All readers.

Magic Bean : The Rise Of Soy In America
 ISBN: 9780700626335Price: 55.00  
Volume: Dewey: 633.340973Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-05-25 
LCC: 2018-004671LCN: SB205.S7R68 2018Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Roth, MatthewSeries: Publisher: University Press of KansasExtent: 368 
Contributor: Reviewer: Ryan M. WarnerAffiliation: Michigan State UniversityIssue Date: February 2019 
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How does a plant transform from a rather minor forage crop to a dominant force in US agriculture? In this captivating and highly readable history, Roth (history, Rutgers Univ.) documents the incredible rise of the soybean and its myriad uses during the 20th century. Soy's dual roles as a primary ingredient in animal feed and as a leading, protein-rich meat alternative for human consumption permeate the narrative. By weaving together the stories of a broad group of individuals with seemingly endless ideas for how to use the emerging legume, it becomes clear that the soybean's success was not preordained. This history is in many ways a history of the US during the 20th century, from the use of soy as a rationed, protein-rich meat alternative during WW II, to the parallel rise of the counterculture and industrial-scale agriculture in the 1960s and 1970s, to a national discussion of "healthy" fats in the 1980s and 1990s. This thoroughly researched volume will appeal to those interested in agriculture, food, and American history.Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.

Manoomin : The Story Of Wild Rice In Michigan
 ISBN: 9781611862805Price: 29.95  
Volume: Dewey: 633.1/7809774Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-06-01 
LCC: 2017-026390LCN: SB191.W55B37 2018Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Barton, Barbara J.Series: Publisher: Michigan State University PressExtent: 214 
Contributor: Reviewer: Martin William QuirkAffiliation: Rock Valley CollegeIssue Date: February 2019 
Contributor:     

Barton is an endangered species biologist for the state of Michigan, and for the last decade has worked on preserving long grain rice. Known in the Anishinaabemowin language as manoomin, long grain rice has played an important cultural role in the lives of Native peoples in Michigan. While it seemingly occupies only a small niche in the larger fields of agricultural and eco-history, Barton's work is a complex story of the physical, demographic, and cultural changes in Michigan over the course of three centuries. The narrative is crisp, moving seamlessly between well-researched history and a travelogue-like account. Barton uses a combination of biology, oral history, and traditional primary and secondary research to provide an ample basis for her conclusions. Ultimately, Manoomin is a species biography well placed in the larger context of the history of Native peoples and Michigan. Barton succeeds in writing what many might consider local history but with a much larger national meaning.Summing Up: Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduate readers and above; general readers.

Seacoast Plants Of The Carolinas : A New Guide For Plant Identification And Use In The Coastal Landscape
 ISBN: 9781469641430Price: 29.95  
Volume: Dewey: 581.9756Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-06-25 
LCC: 2018-001033LCN: QK178.H67 2018Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Hosier, Paul E.Series: Southern Gateways GuidesPublisher: University of North Carolina PressExtent: 504 
Contributor: Reviewer: Lucinda J. SwatzellAffiliation: Southeast Missouri State UniversityIssue Date: January 2019 
Contributor:     

With this welcome and practical book, Hosier (emer., Univ. of North Carolina, Wilmington) offers a comprehensive update to a much earlier work written by Karl Graetz in 1973. In addition to detailed individual entries, Hosier provides several chapters devoted to key issues for growers, students, and others interested in the flora of North Carolina's coastal areas. Global climate change, diminishing and altered ecosystems, and increasingly limited global resources present new challenges to those who seek to use native plants to achieve balance and sustainability. The most exciting aspect of this book is the treatment of climate change, including a chapter discussing the impact of coastal storms on local flora. The book is organized by plant use within beach, maritime, and estuary environments. Hosier provides detailed profiles of flora and ways to use many common species. In addition, he includes appendixes with scientific names, a glossary, and geographic sites to view these plants in use. With this format, Hosier has created a resource useful for researchers, students, professionals, homeowners, and businesses.Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers.

The Medieval And Early Modern Garden In Britain : Enclosure And Transformation, C. 1200-1750
 ISBN: 9781138484740Price: 190.00  
Volume: 58Dewey: 635.0941Grade Min: Publication Date: 2018-03-13 
LCC: 2017-057709LCN: SB457.54.M43 2018Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Skinner, PatriciaSeries: Routledge Studies in Cultural History Ser.Publisher: RoutledgeExtent: 172 
Contributor: Tyers, TheresaReviewer: Micheline NilsenAffiliation: Indiana University South BendIssue Date: January 2019 
Contributor:     

Medieval and early modern gardens continued a tradition from antiquity to the present that includes kitchen, medicinal, pleasure, and cloister gardens. As liminal spaces between buildings and landscapes, these gardens functioned as heterotopic loci with rich resonance and metaphoric significance derived from biblical tradition, courtly literature, or didactic texts. They provided sustenance or pleasure in spaces for meditation, cultivation of knowledge, and display of status. Skinner and Tyers, both historians at Swansea University, have curated ten essays which explore aspects of gardens between 1200 and 1750, mostly in Britain, as they are manifested in literary, historical, and archaeological sources. Two essays also highlight contemporary relevance for these gardens as cultural heritage and as a source of well-being. The current interest in historic gardens, their popular appeal, and their inclusion in monument classification encourage archaeological investigation, restoration, re-creation, and design of contemporary medieval-style gardens. This fresh examination of pre-modern gardens is enriched by the meticulous documentation of each essay, providing an invaluable asset for research in an updated compilation of major garden history sources. Although much visual content is evoked in this volume, illustrations are limited. Scholars will welcome this addition to the literature of British garden history.Summing Up: Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty and professionals.

The Nature Of Plants : An Introduction To How Plants Work
 ISBN: 9780813064086Price: 24.95  
Volume: Dewey: 580Grade Min: Publication Date: 2019-04-16 
LCC: 2018-941382LCN: MLCM 2023/40320 (Q)Grade Max: Version:  
Contributor: Huegel, Craig N.Series: Publisher: University Press of FloridaExtent: 288 
Contributor: Reviewer: Michael S. ZavadaAffiliation: University of Texas Permian BasinIssue Date: September 2019 
Contributor:     

Arguably the most neglected element of our K-12 and higher education life sciences curriculum is the study of plants. Reading the first pages, one might assume this book is an attempt at popularizing the plant sciences. Reading further, however, it becomes clear that this is more like a textbook--but one very different from most modern textbooks, which approach 1,000 pages for a one- or two-semester course in the life sciences. Such textbooks suffer from being tedious to read, and from the use of cartoons or caricatures to illustrate organisms, biological processes, and concepts. This book is a refreshing attempt at "keeping it real," teaching plant sciences where they should be taught: outdoors. The engagingly written prose is reminiscent of an enthusiastic teacher taking the time to explain the wonderment of the natural world without tedium. Huegel (St. Petersburg College) integrates information from physiology, morphology, anatomy, and ecology; photographs illustrate concepts. This is the ideal text for a course in the plant sciences that uses a holistic approach to teaching the subject--ideally, a course with a robust experiential field component for students. It is accessible to readers of all backgrounds, including students from grade eight to sophomores in college.Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and general readers.