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Propitious Esculent
Propitious Esculent
Oct 25, 2024 8:23 PM

Author:John Reader

Propitious Esculent

Baked, Roast, Boiled, Mashed, Steamed, French-Fried... We've probably all tried one or other type, and some of us eat them every day. The potato is one of the most familiar and ubiquitous foods, and part of our sense of humble, even mundane normality. Couch Potato. Cheap as Chips. Mr Potato Head. But the story of the solanum tuberosum is darker - one of struggle, disease, dirt and survival.

Before domestication thousands of years ago, high up on the Andean antiplano, the high alkaloid content of potatoes made them poisonous to humans. But since then, these perfectly formed bundles of nutrition - naturally fat free, consisting mainly of energy giving carbohydrate, but containing protein and half of your RDA of Vitamin C and potassium - have been grown safely and cheaply underground in almost any weather and soil conditions, helping to fuel industrial revolution and population explosions. But their efficiency and versatility have also led to over-reliance and tragedy - most devastatingly, in Ireland.

John Reader follows the potato's fascinating journey, from its origins and evolution in the Andes to its slightly mysterious arrival in Europe, where it became, in Britain, Ireland and throughout Europe, a crucial part of our gastronomic and social fabric. 2008 has been designated International Year of the Potato by the UN, and as global population swells and famine remains a constant risk, Reader asks what role the spud still has to play. Propitious Esculent is a highly readable exploration of the biology, history and social influence of our most humble, versatile foodstuff.

Reviews

Praise for Cities:
A fascinating account of how cities grow and sometimes crumble... Reader's magpie eye...picks out gems... Entertaining... Cities is, finally, a celebration of its subject's refusal to be explained or controlled.

—— Guardian

Cities is vastly entertaining, and Reader has a fine eye for the telling anecdote and statistic... Reading it is a bit like wandering with an erudite companion through a great city in which the past rubs shoulders with the present and surprises lurk around every corner.

—— Time

It is probably the most enjoyable book ever written about the matter of a city... fascinating

—— Jan Morris , The Times

John Pilger unearths, with steely attention to facts, the filthy truth and tells it as it is. I salute him

—— Harold Pinter

The array of interviews with the voiceless and abused provides an indispensable corrective to the litany of disinformation we are fed by the media, and for this achievement Pilger is surely the most outstanding journalist in the world today

—— Guardian

An explosive read... powerful,compelling and questioning- a true reflection of the journalist himself

—— Birmingham Post

Compelling... provocative, argumentative and essential reading for those who wish to challenge their assumptions

—— Waterstone's Books Quarterly

World-class journalism

—— Johann Hari , Independent

What makes John Pilger a truly great journalist is his conscience and bravery

—— Martha Gellhorn

Pilger's work has truly been a beacon of light in dark times

—— Noam Chomsky

John Pilger's determination to swim against the tide of 'mainstream' media reportage prompts him to dig deep. Freedom Next Time is no exception

—— Metro

Impresses with its scholarship and literary craft

—— Observer

Truly, he has written London’s biography. I began rereading it as soon as I finished, and I urge you to read it as soon as possible, so that you can begin rereading it as well

—— Will Self , New Statesman

A fat and filling feast: pretty much everything of interest about the capital is crammed into the eight-hundred pages. One cannot but marvel at Ackroyd’s erudition, his energy in marshalling minutiae, his ear for quotation, his flair for dazzling juxtapositions, his vibrant imagination and sheer exuberance

—— The Times

An erudite labour of love, a fan-letter to a fabulous city, and a book one suspects Ackroyd was destined to write. It illuminates the English character, and is darkly humorous in its detail, tumbling through centuries crowded with legendary events and eccentric observations, as exuberant, energetic and alarming as the city itself

—— Independent on Sunday

A masterpiece

—— Evening Standard

Spellbinding

—— Express on Sunday

A sharp, beautifully written but above all truthful account of London…This is the kind of writing that gives intellectuals a good name

—— Sunday Tribune
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