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sleevendog

good book for the cook and the gardener...

...or anyone that cooks, would like to garden, but does not have the space or yard. (information addicts) : )

Last road trip we read Fukuoka's One Straw Revolution. We read to each other as the other drives...long trip.

This road trip we read 'The Triumph of seeds', Thor Hanson

Fun read.

Kurlansky's review tidbit....

Along the way we learn about rat-proof shells, the purpose of the hot taste of pepper, the role of caffeine in coffee beans, why fruit tastes so good (and why it doesn’t when the seeds aren’t ready for germination). We learn how to grow a seedless watermelon, and about seeds that crossed an ocean, and a seed that was dormant for two millenniums before sprouting — which brings us to the concept of dormancy. As Hanson puts it, “dormancy allows seeds to disperse through time.”

This is Darwinism at its most fundamental, put forward as a good story. What I have never understood about creationists is that myths are usually clung to because they are better than the prosaic truth, but in this case the real story is so much more poetic and stirring and wildly surprising than the comparatively dull one of Genesis. Darwin said he was not refuting the story of creation, just explaining how it worked. He wrote, “There is grandeur in this view of life.”

Before deciding about pipelines, carbon emissions, and war and peace, people need to read Darwin and other volumes on how life on this planet works. You could even have some fun and start with Hanson’s engaging book.


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