May. 13th, 2010

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I'm doing a lot of reading these days. It's absolutely splendid. I finally finished reading Working, and it felt like a big relief to be done. The book is exhausting; the voices add up to a giant cacophony, and although it's neat to get a sense of the personal narrative during a particular era, well, it was too much.

So. Now, I'm trying to finish up Bike for Life, which reads like a lengthy collection of magazine articles. I'm learning a thing or two, here or there, about bicycling technique, et cetera, but frankly, I'll be glad when it's over, too. Then I shall read some fiction. I picked up a copy of Love in the Time of Cholera somewhere a few months ago, and I want to just dive in. There's a handful of other books sitting on my nightstand as well, but [livejournal.com profile] gfrancie's feelings about The Elegance of the Hedgehog are making me pause before picking it up, even though I'm long overdue in passing the book along to DM.

And today, I have to return a spectacular book, Food for Home Use: Producing and Conserving, to its rightful owner, my ceramics instructor. The book belonged to her grandmother, so it's a prized possession, despite the fact that at some point a young child clearly got ahold of it and scribbled on the cover and front plate with a pencil. I wish someone would produce an updated version of this book. It basically goes through detailed instructions for how to grow and preserve food for a family of five, including everything you'd need to know about basic home meat production. Even as a vegetarian, I can admire that and appreciate the value of the knowledge.

I just wrote a response to [livejournal.com profile] gfrancie's rant about Michael Pollan-esque books and talked about FFHU because it's a great antidote to a lot of the food-related books on the market these days. First off, it's a quick and simple read; no flowery language waxing poetic. If I had had it available when I first started making jam and canning, I would have had an easy time getting into it.

My ceramics instructor had a fun time reading passages from the section on how to castrate a pig, but I didn't think it would be relevant for my gardening enterprises, so I haven't gone through that part yet.

Anyway, on top of this fun reading, I've been doing a lot of academic reading as well. This is that brief summer window, between teaching obligations, when I feel like I have my brain all to myself. It's so nice to poke through the literature now and again, to remind myself of what I know and why my research is relevant and useful.

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