Imagen del autor
51+ Obras 2,022 Miembros 31 Reseñas 4 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

He is a prize-winning author & naturalist, lives in Tucson, where he is director of conservation biology at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum & cofounder of Native Seeds/Search. (Bowker Author Biography)
Créditos de la imagen: Photo credit: Chris Hinkle

Series

Obras de Gary Paul Nabhan

The Forgotten Pollinators (1996) — Autor — 149 copias
The Desert Smells Like Rain (1982) 145 copias
Gathering the Desert (1985) 113 copias
Desert Wildflowers (1988) — Technical editor — 22 copias
The nature of desert nature (2020) 10 copias

Obras relacionadas

Natural Beekeeping: Organic Approaches to Modern Apiculture (2007) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones152 copias
Travelers' Tales ITALY : True Stories (1998) — Contribuidor — 115 copias
Heart of the Land: Essays on Last Great Places (1994) — Contribuidor — 106 copias
Best Food Writing 2010 (2010) — Contribuidor — 102 copias
Best Food Writing 2012 (2012) — Contribuidor; Contribuidor — 43 copias
To Eat with Grace (2014) — Contribuidor — 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Miembros

Reseñas

I was hoping for a really thoroughly researched, encyclopedic book about all sorts of different flavors and their genetic, historic and anthropologic rationales. In retrospect, that was a really tall order, so the fail to meet expectations needs to be put in that context.

And the book isn't bad. Parts are quite good: the conversation about the diversity of human diet and evolution since paleolithic times and the hypothesis that dependent on different genetic makeup people need different foods in order to be healthy (although he seems to view this in a very prescriptive fashion, leaving those of us with mixed genetic ancestry, which, I mean, is nearly everyone these days, to wonder if we need to whole genome sequence ourselves just to answer "what's for dinner?")

I also really enjoyed the chapter on different tasters. I knew that I was a bitter taster from high school bio taste tester strips, but I like many classically bitter foods -- cruciferous vegetables, very dark chocolate, etc., so I had always discounted the idea of chemical tasters, but the chapter really helped explain the spectrum of phenotype and expand it to things that I am averse to (grapefruit, orange pith).

The chapter on G6PD is decent. Anyone who reads popular science with any avidity already knows G6PD, but the speculation about its coincidence not just with regions with malaria but also the timing of the fava season to the malaria season expanding the discussion.


There was a very long discussion at the beginning about Native Americans, alcoholism and diabetes. These topics have been covered at length and certainly Dr. Nabhan explores his personal ties to these issues, but this part is not very scientifically interesting.

His section on MTHFR is probably the poorest -- people are at a cardiac disadvantage if they carry the polymorphism and don't ingest enough folate, and then he concludes that the polymorphism flourished in Northern Europe because it encouraged folate dependence and therefore encouraged selective mating (i.e. mates who did not have access to folate would become sick, allowing people of mating age to select only those with access to folate.) However, that is a pretty flimsy explanation for why there would be a selection advantage for the mutation (versus the wildtype, which would appear fit regardless of access to folate.) It's clear Nabhan is not a geneticist!

Another complaint is that he is obsessed with the idea that we have nutritional diseases. He keeps alluding to the fact that food intolerances are growing and that we as a population are increasingly unhealthy (and hypothesizes it's because we don't eat our specific ancestral food, which, see above re: genelogical prescriptivism.) This is just a pet peeve of mine -- people are mostly getting healthier as time passes.

My biggest complaint overall, though, is how thin the volume is: it includes the chapters I mentioned and another exploring why we eat spicy food and why different people tolerate it more than others and that's it.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
settingshadow | 3 reseñas más. | Aug 19, 2023 |
A different sort of book - the author discusses seeds and plants and their origins while walking a long trek through Italy.
 
Denunciada
MarkLacy | May 29, 2022 |
There is a lot of interesting anecdotes about spices, their history, and uses, but this is not at all a rigorous study, but a very idiosyncratic view which excludes about the same number of facts as it includes and includes complete speculation as fact.
½
 
Denunciada
quondame | otra reseña | Apr 10, 2021 |
I enjoy this mix of personal encounters with Papago relating to farming and native plants, and his scientific explanations of what they've learned thru experience.I especially appreciate the extensive notes at the end of the book which give more details about his sources, and inspire further reading. If I lived in a desert I would be attempting to put into practice (and learning more details) the practices of the Tohono O'Odham. One thing I can do right here: The Papago practice to use rainwater instead of well water has been supported by a comparison study of the same crop raised both ways. The rainwater foods were higher in protein and other nutrients, and were more productive. The Papago saya the well water just doesn't taste the same. So this spring I put containers out during a rain, and drank the fresh sweet rainwater. They are right.… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
juniperSun | otra reseña | Apr 9, 2021 |

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Obras
51
También por
8
Miembros
2,022
Popularidad
#12,713
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
31
ISBNs
89
Idiomas
4
Favorito
4

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