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Food Not Lawns: How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden And Your Neighborhood into a Community
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Home > Medical Books > Food Allergies > Item 12
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Food Not Lawns: How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden And Your Neighborhood into a Community
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by Heather Coburn Flores
Sales Rank: 13813

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List Price: $25.00
$16.50
At Amazon on 10-25-2008
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Paperback: 344 pages
Publisher: Chelsea Green; 1st Edition, 2nd printing edition October 1, 2006
Language: English
ISBN-10: 193339207X
ISBN-13: 978-1933392073
Product Dimensions:
9.9 x 8 x 0.9 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
From Publishers Weekly
For Flores, "practicing ecological living is a deeply subversive act," and while most gardening books do not include warnings that COINTELPRO "can and willrape you," it is only because most gardening books do not encourage "guerilla gardening" after describing the basics of garden planning and pruning. More advanced topics range from integrating barnyard birds into a garden to getting more mileage out of the home water cycle to the benefits of a balanced insect population. The illustrations are amusing as well as helpful, and though the index is not extensive, the book, overall, is a much better read than the average gardening book, both in terms of range and entertainment value. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Product Review
"For activist readers who believe activism is a political pursuit, FOOD NOT LAWNS: HOW TO TURN YOUR YARD INTO A GARDEN AND YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD INTO A COMMUNITY offers a different viewpoint, maintaining that growing food where you live is a key method of becoming a food activist in the community. Chapters advocate planting home and community gardens with an eye to drawing important connections between the politics of a home or community garden and the wider politics of usage, consumption, and sustainability. Another rarity: chapters promote small, easy changes in lifestyles to achieve a transition between personal choice and political activism at the community level, providing keys to change any reader can use." - Bookwatch/Midwest Book Review, December 2006
"Certified permaculture designer Flores advocates living an ecologically friendly lifestyle by creating gardens. Following a foreword by Toby Hemenway (Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture), she discusses the identification of garden sites, the water cycle and water conservation, soils and composting, plants, how to save seed, project design, the fostering of community involvement, the inclusion of children in projects, the sharing of information, and activism. Many of Flores's ideas are for the extremely committed. She advocates dumpster digging, composting human feces, and living life without appliances like refrigerators. She also suggests growing food on land, not necessarily with the landowner's permission, and espouses gray-water conservation techniques that may be illegal in some communities. While growing your own food is a worthy goal, Flores doesn't always seem to recognize the hard work involved. She also doesn't expand on all of her ideas, but she does offer an extensive list of resources for further research. Flores has an engaging style and is clearly passionate about her subject, and her debut book provides an alternative viewpoint, but it will probably not interest mainstream audiences. Purchase as required." - Library Journal review by Sue O'Brien, Downers Grove Public Library, November 15, 2006.
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Food Not Lawns: How to Turn Your Yard into a Garden And Your Neighborhood into a Community
Available from Amazon
Price: $16.50
Updated on 10-25-2008

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Last Modified : 10-25-2008
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