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What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma, which I am still chewing over a few days after finishing it. There’s a lot of stuff in this book and I don’t think I can really do justice to all of it (I’m not even sure I could summarize all of it in a reasonably-sized post, let alone offer my opinions on it). But one thing it really drove home for me is the massive hypocrisy of federal healthy eating initiatives, given that the federal government’s approach to agricultural subsidies is pretty much the reason that American eating patterns are so completely messed up in the first place.

Like, seriously. If the government stopped subsidizing corn on such a massive scale, it might not solve the obesity/heart disease/type II diabetes/every other diet-linked health issue caused by the mainstream American diet. But it would help a lot more than nitpicking about school lunch guidelines and whether there ought to be soda machines in schools.

What I’m Reading Now

I asked one of my grad school friends for book recommendations about daily life during the Revolutionary War. Unfortunately I think something was lost in translation, because he recommended The Shoemaker and the Tea Party, which is interesting if you want to know something about the political motivations of the common man in Boston or the way that the public memory of the Revolutionary War changed in the later decades (did you know the Boston Tea Party wasn’t called that till the 1820s?), but not so useful if you were really hoping for something about, say, what people ate for breakfast in the years around the Revolution.

I’m also trundling along in Louisa May Alcott’s Moods, and have become unexpectedly caught up in it. Our heroine Sylvia married a man she likes but doesn’t love, because she thought the man she did love had married another… Only it turns out he didn’t! And never sent her a letter or anything, because they gazed deep into each other’s eyes one time and of course after that he was sure she could never even think of marrying someone else. He has been bitterly disabused of this illusion.

And now he’s paying a visit to Sylvia and her husband, because of course he is, and they’re all having an amiable chat about the morality of divorce in cases of marital incompatibility. (I feel kind of sorry for the husband here. He has no idea that he may be talking his lady love into leaving him.) Is Alcott going to end up writing an argument for divorce???

This seems so unlikely - I really think it’s more likely that Sylvia’s husband is going to conveniently die in battle or something - AND YET. I’ll keep you posted on how it all pans out!

What I Plan to Read Next

You guy, I’m gonna do it, I’m gonna read all the Caldecott winners. I found a printable list of Caldecott winners (it’s made to be colored in as you read each book! How cute is that?), and also I checked and the local library has all but two of the Caldecott winning books. So OBVIOUSLY I have to do it.

Plus, the 2016 winner is Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World’s Most Famous Bear, about the origins of Winnie the Pooh. Obviously I can’t pass that up!

Date: 2016-05-18 03:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I'm excited for your Caldecott project! I'll tweet it when you start. I loved your Newbury project.

Very curious to see how the Alcott book ends up!

Date: 2016-05-19 02:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
I'm thinking that the Caldecott project will be the new Picture Book Monday. Perhaps I will call it Caldecott Monday? Or maybe I'll stick with Picture Book Monday for continuity? I think Caldecott Monday sounds better.

Date: 2016-05-23 03:20 pm (UTC)
ext_1611: Isis statue (food porn)
From: [identity profile] isiscolo.livejournal.com
Catching up, now that I'm back after a vacation...I agree with the ag (commodities) subsidy issue, which is the source of so many weirdnesses in our economy, not just messed-up diet but also biofuel (e.g. corn ethanol is not the best fuel to be concentrating on, but corn is king). But my favorite Pollan book is The Botany of Desire, which also touches on the unintended consequences of legislative meddling, but is mostly cool to me because of the in-depth exploration of the individual plants discussed in it.

Date: 2016-05-23 03:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
I've been thinking about reading The Botany of Desire too - really all his books look interesting, and he's such a good author that it seems worthwhile to follow him through his bibliography anyway.

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