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The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World

The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World

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Author: Michael Pollan
Publisher: Random House Trade Paperbacks
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 165 reviews
Sales Rank: 1312

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Pages: 304
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 0.7

ISBN: 0375760393
Dewey Decimal Number: 306.45
EAN: 9780375760396
ASIN: 0375760393

Publication Date: May 28, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Condition: Standard used condition.

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 161-165 of 165
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5 out of 5 stars AN APPLE IS NOT JUST AN APPLE!   June 4, 2001
Sandra D. Peters (Prince Edward Island, Canada)
22 out of 28 found this review helpful

Michael Pollan has an incredible gift to tell a story and captivate his readers. After reading this book you will never again be able to look out the window at your garden without feeling some assimilation to Nature's harvest, particularly if apples and potatoes are among the fare, and the tulips are prolific. If marijuana also happens to be hidden among the pretty green foliage, well....naughty you! However, these are the four plants the author uses to portray the significant relationship between man and the plant world. The sweetness of the apple, the use of the potato in an attempt to control nature, the exhilarating beauty of the tulip, and the intoxicating abilities of marijuana are all discussed in a spirited and fascinating manner. In reaction to anti-drug control, marijuana became a hothouse plant, and moving it to a controlled environment sometimes brought on a lot more "heat" than initially found in the hothouse! I enjoyed the author's exhilarating writing style and refreshing outlook on man and nature; the book is a pleasure to read.


5 out of 5 stars Plants and Humans Influence Each Other for Mutual Benefit!   May 22, 2001
Donald Mitchell (Boston)
163 out of 179 found this review helpful

"What existential difference is there between the human being's role in this (or any) garden and the bumblebees?" "Did I choose to plant these potatoes, or did the potato make me do it? With profound questions like these, Michael Pollan pollinates your mind with a new world view of our relationships with plants, one in which humans are not at the center. The book focuses on four primary examples of how plants provide benefits to humans that lead humans to benefit the plants (apples for sweetness, tulips for beauty, marijuana for intoxication, and the potato for control over nature's food supply). You will learn many new facts in the process that will fascinate you. The book's main value is that you will learn that we need to be more thoughtful in how we assist in the evolution of plant species.

The book builds on Darwin's original observations about how artificial evolution occurs (evolution directed by human efforts). So-called domesticated species thrive while the wild ones we admire often do not. Compare dogs to wolves as an example. Mr. Pollan challenges the mental separation we make between wild and domesticated species successfully in the book.

The apple section was my favorite. You will learn that John Chapman (Johnny Appleseed) was a rather odd fellow who was actually in the business of raising and selling apple trees. He planted a few seeds at the homes where he stayed overnight on his travels. Mr. Chapman had apple tree nurseries all over Ohio and Indiana, which he started 2-3 years before he expected an influx of settlers. Homesteading laws required these settlers to plant 50 apple or pears trees in order to take title to the land. And these apples were for making hard apple cider, not eating apples. He was the "American Dionysus" in Mr. Pollan's view. Apple trees need to be grafted to make good eating apples. Chapman's trees produced many genetic variations, which are good for the species. Apple trees became more narrow in their genes after other sources for alcohol and sweetness became available (from cane sugar). Now, the ancient genes of apple trees are being kept in living form from Kazakhstan, before they are lost due to economic development.

Tulips were the source of the famous Tulipmania in Holland. Rare colors occurred due to viruses. Those became extremely valuable during the tulip boom market in the 17th century. Now, growers try to keep the viruses out and we have much more dull, consistent species. We have probably lost much beauty in favor of order in the process.

The intoxicants in marijuana are probably caused by toxins that the plants make to kill off insects. Because the plant is a weed, it grows very rapidly. There is a hilarious story about the author's experiences in growing two plants that you will love. As the antidrug war progressed, marijuana became a hothouse plant and was bred and developed to grow much more rapidly under humid, high-light conditions indoors. You will read about modern commercial farms in Holland.

The potato story is the most complex. The Irish potato famine related to monoculture. The Incas had always planted a variety of potatoes to avoid the risk of disease. Now, biotechnology has added an insecticide to the leaves of potato plants, taking monoculture one step further. Interestingly, the insects are already becoming resistant to the insecticide. Are we building a new risk to famine with this approach? How will genetically altered potatoes affect humans? Is having consistent french fries at fast food places enough of an incentive to take this risk? These are the kinds of questions raised by this chapter.

Mr. Pollan has described a "dance of human and plant desire that left neither the plants nor the people . . . unchanged."

His key point is that we should be sure to include strong biodiversity in our approaches. Nature can create more variation faster than fledgling biotechnology industry can. Time has proven that biodiversity has many advantages for humans while monoculture has usually proven to have at least one major drawback. In reality, we can probably have both.

If you are like me, you will find Mr. Pollan's personal experiences with the plants and his investigations of the historical figures to be fascinating. He is a good story teller, and a fine writer.

After you read this book, take a walk through a park or a garden and think about Mr. Pollan's argument. Then consider how these principles can be applied to help ideas change, improve, and grow in more valuable ways.

Look at life from many different perspectives . . . and live more intelligently and beneficially!




5 out of 5 stars Impossible to set down!   May 17, 2001
17 out of 18 found this review helpful

Michael Pollan has written a hugely entertaining and wonderfully informative book. He takes us on a wild ride through the garden, changing our perspective forever, alternating between historical tale, vivid description of life in the garden and witty aside. It's a breathtaking book, a sure classic.

I'm not lending my copy to anyone or I'll never get it back!!


5 out of 5 stars Whose Yard?   May 14, 2001
Karen Seashore (Sandpoint, Idaho USA)
17 out of 20 found this review helpful

I bought this book to send to my college student son, an amateur botanist. But before I mailed it, I thought I'd read the first few pages. Six days later, I am sorry to close the book after devouring it with fascination and delight. There I was out in the yard today all alone and thinking in quite new ways about weeds and plants and insects and dirt. Maybe I wasn't alone. The apple tree in the corner was flowering to beat the band. My tulips were beguiling me to think about what kinds I need to order for next year. I was planting potatoes, cutting the gnarly pieces that hold their eyes and wondering if their genes were "natural." If I had a hidden crop of cannabis somewhere in the little empire of my yard (my yard or the plants' yard?), I'd have been surrounded by the four plants that Michael Pollan uses to tweak our sense of who is running the show.


5 out of 5 stars A Great Read   May 11, 2001
14 out of 16 found this review helpful

From time to time a book comes along that makes you see the world in an entirely new way. Michael Pollan's Botany of Desire is that sort of book. Pollan picks four plants--the tulip, the apple, the potato, and cannabis--and shows how these plants have shaped us--determined our lives--as much as we have theirs. After you finish this eloquent, lively, original book, nature will never look quite the same to you again.

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