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Global nonfiction: Six new books about our perilous past and precarious future
Global nonfiction: Six new books about our perilous past and precarious future

Scroll.in

time2 days ago

  • General
  • Scroll.in

Global nonfiction: Six new books about our perilous past and precarious future

All information sourced from publishers. We Are Eating the Earth: The Race to Fix Our Food System and Save Our Climate, Michael Grunwald Humanity has cleared a land mass the size of Asia plus Europe to grow food, and our food system generates a third of our carbon emissions. By 2050, we're going to need a lot more calories to fill nearly 10 billion bellies, but we can't feed the world without frying it if we keep tearing down an acre of rainforest every six seconds. We are eating the earth, and the greatest challenge facing our species will be to slow our relentless expansion of farmland into nature. Even if we quit fossil fuels, we'll keep hurtling towards climate chaos if we don't solve our food and land problems. In this rollicking, shocking narrative, Grunwald shows how the world, after decades of ignoring the climate problem at the centre of our plates, has pivoted to making it worse, embracing solutions that sound sustainable but could make it even harder to grow more food with less land. But he also tells the stories of the dynamic scientists and entrepreneurs pursuing real solutions, from a jungle-tough miracle crop called pongamia to genetically-edited cattle embryos, from Impossible Whoppers to a non-polluting pesticide that uses the technology behind the COVID vaccines to constipate beetles to death. It's an often infuriating saga of lobbyists, politicians, and even the scientific establishment making terrible choices for humanity, but it's also a hopeful account of the people figuring out what needs to be done – and trying to do it. The Heretic of Cacheu: Struggles over Life in a Seventeenth-Century West African Port, Toby Green In 1665, Crispina Peres, the most powerful trader in the West African slave trafficking port of Cacheu, was arrested by the Inquisition. Her enemies had conspired to denounce her for taking treatments prescribed by Senegambian healers: the djabakós. But who was Peres? And why was the Portuguese Inquisition so concerned with policing the faith of a West African woman in today's Guinea-Bissau? In Cacheu, Toby Green takes us to the heart of this conundrum, but also into the atmosphere of a very distant time and place. We learn how people in 17th-century Cacheu built their houses, what they wore, how they worshipped – and also the work they did, how they had fun, and how they healed themselves from illness. Through this story, the haunting realities of the growing slave trade and the rise of European empires emerge in shocking detail. By the 1650s, the relationship between Europe, West Africa, and the Americas was already an old one, with slaving entrepots, colonies, and military bases interweaving over many generations. But Cacheu also challenged the dynamic. It was globally connected to places ranging from China and India to Brazil and Colombia, and women like Crispina Peres ran the town and challenged the patriarchy of the empire. Now, through the surviving documents recording Peres's case, we can see what this world was really like. Ghost Nation: The Story of Taiwan and Its Struggle for Survival, Chris Horton Despite sitting at the heart of the tense relationship between China and the US, Taiwan's history and its people have long been overlooked and misunderstood. In Ghost Nation, Taiwan-based journalist Chris Horton tells their stories and explores why this diplomatically isolated country has become such an important player on the world stage. As China's military preparations continue apace, the stakes have never been higher. Perched precariously on the fault lines of global power, the fate of this vibrant democracy and tech colossus will shape Asia's future – either containing or facilitating China's expansionist goals. Drawing from over a decade of living and reporting in Taiwan, and informed by interviews with everyday citizens, presidents and other key figures, Horton provides a panoramic view of this fascinating country. Ghost Nation will leave readers with a profound appreciation for Taiwan's struggle for self-determination – and its pivotal role in our shared future. Hollywood Vampires: Johnny Depp, Amber Heard and the Celebrity Exploitation Machine, Kelly Loudenberg and Makiko Wholey Celebrity romances have always captured the public's imagination, playing out like soap operas seized upon by fans and tabloids alike. By the same token, high-profile trials can take over the mainstream media cycle, with both news pundits and the public picking over every detail to predict outcomes and cast their own judgments. Enter the union, dissolution, and hostile legal battle between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard – where these dual obsessions collided, creating a chaotic moment of true cultural fixation. Hollywood Vampires offers an inside account of one of the most controversial and consequential celebrity scandals of the internet era. Fueled by viral clips, reaction videos, and endless online debates, the trial became more than a legal battle. It became a public spectacle, dividing audiences worldwide. Kelly Loudenberg and Makiko Wholey were journalists on the ground for the Depp v Heard trial. Having closely followed Johnny, Amber, and their camps, they spent the years leading up to and following the trial interviewing the couple's closest allies as well as their managers, lawyers, agents, business associates, publicists, assistants, and personal staff. The result is a Hollywood epic full of revealing details that tell a wider tale about the celebrity-industrial complex, modern fandom, inflammatory culture wars, and contemporary feminism. Turning the lens around, Hollywood Vampires questions how the celebrity exploitation machine, strengthened by the forces of social media and legacy media alike, blurs the lines between fact and fiction, comedy and horror. It forces us to ask ourselves why we take celebrity culture so seriously in the first place – and who wins and who loses when Hollywood becomes the vehicle for our own personal and political causes. All His Spies: The Secret World of Robert Cecil, Stephen Alford Robert Cecil, statesman and spymaster, lived through an astonishingly threatening period in English history. Queen Elizabeth had no clear successor and enemies both external and internal threatened to destroy England as a Protestant state, most spectacularly with the Spanish Armada and the Gunpowder Plot. Cecil stood at the heart of the Tudor and then Stuart state, a vital figure in managing the succession from Elizabeth I to James I and VI, warding off military and religious threats and steering the decisions of two very different but equally wilful and hard-to-manage monarchs. The promising son of Queen Elizabeth's chief minister, Lord Burghley, for Cecil, there was no choice but politics, and he became supremely skilled in the arts of power, making many rivals and enemies. Many readers are familiar with the great events of this tumultuous time, but All His Spies shows how easily these dramas could have turned out very differently. Cecil's sureness of purpose, his espionage network and good luck all conspired to keep England uninvaded and to create a new 'British' monarchy which has endured to the present day. The Beast in the Clouds: The Roosevelt Brothers' Deadly Quest to Find the Mythical Giant Panda, Nathalia Holt The Himalayas – a snowcapped mountain range that hides treacherous glacier crossings, raiders poised to attack unsuspecting travellers, and air so thin that even seasoned explorers die of oxygen deprivation. Yet among the dangers lies one of the most beautiful and fragile ecosystems in the world. During the 1920s, dozens of expeditions scoured the Chinese and Tibetan wilderness in search of the panda bear, a beast that many believed did not exist. When the two eldest sons of President Theodore Roosevelt sought the bear in 1928, they had little hope of success. Together with a team of scientists and naturalists, they accomplished what a decade of explorers could not, ultimately introducing the panda to the West. In the process, they documented a vanishing world and set off a new era of conservation biology. Along the way, the Roosevelt expedition faced an incredible series of hardships as they disappeared in a blizzard, were attacked by robbers, overcome by sickness and disease, and lost their food supply in the mountains. The explorers would emerge transformed, although not everyone would survive. Beast in the Clouds brings alive these extraordinary events in a potent nonfiction thriller featuring the indomitable Roosevelt family.

How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald
How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald

Are those big, juicy burgers really bad for the planet? Alas, yes. Is eating organic food going to save it? Unfortunately, no, and that option might actually not be so good — at least for the ailing global climate. Those just a couple of the takeaways from Miami writer Michael Grunwald's deep dive into how humanity's insatiable appetite is fueling both environmental destruction and the climate crisis. The title of his new book, We Are Eating the Earth: The Race to Fix Our Food System and Save Our Climate, sums up the path Grunwald finds us on. Grunwald — author of the 'The Swamp,' a highly regarded history of the Everglades and the effort to restore it — specializes in big picture breakdowns of complicated issues. Like with Everglades restoration, some seeming food solutions produce problems of their own. The book's guide of sorts is land-use expert and environmentalist Tim Searchinger, who drew up a blueprint for how and what we should be planting and eating to both reduce agriculture's climate impacts and protect wild areas. Grunwald explores the pros and cons of current practices, poking holes in trendy concepts of 'biofuels' like corn-derived ethanol, which he brands a 'fake climate solution.' He suggests there are lessons to be learn from often stigmatized 'factory farming.' And while he agrees going vegan is good, he may make you rethink that pack of organic carrots. Grunwald, who will appear at Books and Books in Coral Gables, on July 14 at 7 p.m., sat down for a lunchtime interview at a restaurant of his choosing, Bayshore Club in Coral Gables. For the record, he ordered ahi tuna mini tacos and the fish of the day—corvina with plantains. He'll explain why in our Q&A, which has been edited for clarity and brevity. Q: I would've thought you'd pick a vegan place with some cauliflower wings like Planta Queen but you picked a place with mainly seafood. Why? A: I like the views and I'm close so I rode my bike. I stopped eating beef when I started the book. Going vegan is the best diet for the planet, but cutting out beef and lamb is as good as going vegetarian because beef and lamb are seven to 10 times worse than chicken or pork. One of my messages from the book is that better is better than worse – and perfect usually isn't on the menu. And I love fish. Fish are actually pretty efficient creatures. I do believe there's this notion, and it's big in the environmental movement and climate movement right now, that individual emissions don't matter. I get it right, what the government does is more important than what one of 8 billion people does, and what corporations do is a big deal too – but I think it's gone way too far. I think emissions are us, and it's not like Donald Trump or Burger King are shoving all this meat down our throats. It's a choice we make. The average American eats the equivalent of three burgers a week. And if we ate two we would save a Massachusetts's worth of land every year. Q: Your book chronicles how demand for food and land to grow it on is destroying global ecosystems. In Miami, we have the opposite, urban sprawl consuming the Redland agriculture area. Which is worse? A: It's funny. Most of us live in the cities and suburbs, and this is where we live and work and go to school and play on the planet but the developed area of the planet is about one in every 100 acres. By 2050, it might be 2% of the planet. But agriculture is two of every five acres, it's 40%. So people talk about urban sprawl, and I'm not saying it's not an issue, but agricultural sprawl is, like, 40 times bigger. And we know this, right? When you take a cross-country flight, and you look out, you see all those squares and circles. You can see that the natural planet is becoming an agricultural planet, and that's what my book's about. But what's happening in the Redland, which is something that people should pay attention to, those are important questions, because they make food in the Redlands, and if that food becomes development, that food will have to be replaced somewhere else. It probably won't be a parking lot, right? It'll be a prairie or a forest or a wetland. Q: Much of the mainstream discussion on climate and farming has focused on factory farms. Why zero in on land loss instead? A: Even if you only look at it from a climate perspective, agriculture is about 25% of global emissions. And some of that is diesel tractors, crop dusters and other fossil fuel farm equipment. And some of it is the burping and farting cows that everybody talks about it. And then some of it is nitrous oxide from fertilizer, which is actually a huge problem. Fertilizer is literally made from natural gas. But the main problem is deforestation and wetland drainage. There's a lot of carbon stored in nature, and we clear nature to grow food, and that nature ends up in the sky. And not only that, that nature was providing a service, it was absorbing carbon from the sky through photosynthesis. Q: You make a counter-intuitive suggestion that to save the planet, we need to rethink eating organics. Why? A: I try not to be too prescriptive about what specific type of farming we should have, but we need high-yield farming because we need to make more food per acre so that we can use fewer acres. Otherwise, we need more acres to make food, right? Organic and regenerative practices have a lot of support all over the political spectrum. Everybody's pushing this idea that we should sort of transform agriculture to 'agroecology,' to make it kinder and gentler and more like nature, use fewer chemicals. I don't have a problem with that, except when it reduces yields because the real environmental disaster of agriculture is when nature is transformed into agriculture. There are some bad things about factory farms. They treat animals badly. Often treat people badly. Too many antibiotics. There's a lot not to like – but factories are good at manufacturing lots of stuff, and we need to manufacture like 50% more calories over the next 25 years. We're gonna have to make more food over the next 25 years than we've made in the last 12,000 years. Grass-fed cows that spend their entire life on pastures and never go to these horrible feed lots are considerably worse from an environmental and climate perspective. It takes them longer to get to slaughter weight, so they're alive to burp and fart more methane and mostly because they use more land and eat more of the earth. There are a lot of people who see efficiency in agriculture as kind of a dirty word but efficiency saves resources. And efficiency saves land, and that's really important. Q: You write about how the Bezos Earth Fund invested in meat alternatives (which Lauren Sánchez, billionaire Jeff Bezo's wife, announced at the Aspen Conference in Miami Beach). Why hasn't it caught on and does it still have a future? A: The quick answer to the first question is, the dogs didn't like the food. There was a lot of excitement in 2019 when Beyond and Impossible got started as the first companies trying to grow vegan food for non-vegans, but they weren't better than meat. So people got excited about them, and they tried them, but they didn't keep going back. Beyond went from $250 a share to $2 a share. Impossible's still doing okay, because it's good. Plant-based meat which is grown in a fermenter from fungi comes out naturally meaty and shockingly healthy. That's just gotten started. Lab-grown meat, or cultivated meat they like to call it now, because, yeah, lab-grown sounds terrible, will be grown in a brewery, not a lab. I've eaten this stuff and it's great. It tastes like meat because it's meat. It's grown from actual animal cells. People aren't going to buy it because it's like, good for the planet. But our species is good at inventing stuff, and it can get better, it can get cheaper, it can get healthier, and then it can make a difference. Q: Florida is the first state in the U.S. to ban lab-grown or cultivated meat. Is this a step backward? A: I mean, it's ridiculous. This is supposed to be the Free State of Florida, and they're telling us what kind of meat we can eat. And that's bull----. I can say that this shows the sort of danger for cultivated meat and meat alternatives being caught up in partisan culture wars. They've become 'woke' to eat. Since when do we think of technology that way? Q: How can people change eating habits to make a difference in the climate? A: First eat less beef, and second waste less food. Because when you waste food, and we waste a quarter of our food, you waste the farmland that was used to grow the food, the fertilizer, the water, the labor – the world uses a landmass the size of China to grow garbage. If somebody says, what's the third thing, I would probably say, eat even a little less beef. Q: You started and ended the book in the Everglades, why? A: We visited the water treatment wetlands that turned out to be an inadvertent great land and climate solution and wetland restoration, which is what Everglades restoration is all about. Turns out to be the best bang for the buck that you can get for the climate. I didn't want this to just be a Debbie Downer book. I'm writing about all these problems, and then I'm writing about all these solutions that haven't panned out yet. But, I do believe that things can get better. So I think part of the message is we've got to keep working on this stuff, and it's not like a guarantee that it's going to save the planet, but maybe some good stuff will happen. Ashley Miznazi is a climate change reporter for the Miami Herald funded by the Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Family Foundation and MSC Cruises in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners.

How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald
How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald

Miami Herald

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Miami Herald

How to feed the world without trashing the planet. Q&A with Miami writer Michael Grunwald

Are those big, juicy burgers really bad for the planet? Alas, yes. Is eating organic food going to save it? Unfortunately, no, and that option might actually not be so good — at least for the ailing global climate. Those just a couple of the takeaways from Miami writer Michael Grunwald's deep dive into how humanity's insatiable appetite is fueling both environmental destruction and the climate crisis. The title of his new book, We Are Eating the Earth: The Race to Fix Our Food System and Save Our Climate, sums up the path Grunwald finds us on. Grunwald — author of the 'The Swamp,' a highly regarded history of the Everglades and the effort to restore it — specializes in big picture breakdowns of complicated issues. Like with Everglades restoration, some seeming food solutions produce problems of their own. The book's guide of sorts is land-use expert and environmentalist Tim Searchinger, who drew up a blueprint for how and what we should be planting and eating to both reduce agriculture's climate impacts and protect wild areas. Grunwald explores the pros and cons of current practices, poking holes in trendy concepts of 'biofuels' like corn-derived ethanol, which he brands a 'fake climate solution.' He suggests there are lessons to be learn from often stigmatized 'factory farming.' And while he agrees going vegan is good, he may make you rethink that pack of organic carrots. Grunwald, who will appear at Books and Books in Coral Gables, on July 14 at 7 p.m., sat down for a lunchtime interview at a restaurant of his choosing, Bayshore Club in Coral Gables. For the record, he ordered ahi tuna mini tacos and the fish of the day—corvina with plantains. He'll explain why in our Q&A, which has been edited for clarity and brevity. I would've thought you'd pick a vegan place with some cauliflower wings like Planta Queen but you picked a place with mainly seafood. Why? I like the views and I'm close so I rode my bike. I stopped eating beef when I started the book. Going vegan is the best diet for the planet, but cutting out beef and lamb is as good as going vegetarian because beef and lamb are seven to 10 times worse than chicken or pork. One of my messages from the book is that better is better than worse – and perfect usually isn't on the menu. And I love fish. Fish are actually pretty efficient creatures. I do believe there's this notion, and it's big in the environmental movement and climate movement right now, that individual emissions don't matter. I get it right, what the government does is more important than what one of 8 billion people does, and what corporations do is a big deal too – but I think it's gone way too far. I think emissions are us, and it's not like Donald Trump or Burger King are shoving all this meat down our throats. It's a choice we make. The average American eats the equivalent of three burgers a week. And if we ate two we would save a Massachusetts's worth of land every year. Your book chronicles how demand for food and land to grow it on is destroying global ecosystems. In Miami, we have the opposite, urban sprawl consuming the Redland agriculture area. Which is worse? it's funny. Most of us live in the cities and suburbs, and this is where we live and work and go to school and play on the planet but the developed area of the planet is about one in every 100 acres. By 2050, it might be 2% of the planet. But agriculture is two of every five acres, it's 40%. So people talk about urban sprawl, and I'm not saying it's not an issue, but agricultural sprawl is, like, 40 times bigger. And we know this, right? When you take a cross-country flight, and you look out, you see all those squares and circles. You can see that the natural planet is becoming an agricultural planet, and that's what my book's about. But what's happening in the Redland, which is something that people should pay attention to, those are important questions, because they make food in the Redlands, and if that food becomes development, that food will have to be replaced somewhere else. It probably won't be a parking lot, right? It'll be a prairie or a forest or a wetland. Much of the mainstream discussion on climate and farming has focused on factory farms. Why zero in on land loss instead? Even if you only look at it from a climate perspective, agriculture is about 25% of global emissions. And some of that is diesel tractors, crop dusters and other fossil fuel farm equipment. And some of it is the burping and farting cows that everybody talks about it. And then some of it is nitrous oxide from fertilizer, which is actually a huge problem. Fertilizer is literally made from natural gas. But the main problem is deforestation and wetland drainage. There's a lot of carbon stored in nature, and we clear nature to grow food, and that nature ends up in the sky. And not only that, that nature was providing a service, it was absorbing carbon from the sky through photosynthesis. You make a counter-intuitive suggestion that to save the planet, we need to rethink eating organics. Why? I try not to be too prescriptive about what specific type of farming we should have, but we need high-yield farming because we need to make more food per acre so that we can use fewer acres. Otherwise, we need more acres to make food, right? Organic and regenerative practices have a lot of support all over the political spectrum. Everybody's pushing this idea that we should sort of transform agriculture to 'agroecology,' to make it kinder and gentler and more like nature, use fewer chemicals. I don't have a problem with that, except when it reduces yields because the real environmental disaster of agriculture is when nature is transformed into agriculture. There are some bad things about factory farms. They treat animals badly. Often treat people badly. Too many antibiotics. There's a lot not to like – but factories are good at manufacturing lots of stuff, and we need to manufacture like 50% more calories over the next 25 years. We're gonna have to make more food over the next 25 years than we've made in the last 12,000 years. Grass-fed cows that spend their entire life on pastures and never go to these horrible feed lots are considerably worse from an environmental and climate perspective. It takes them longer to get to slaughter weight, so they're alive to burp and fart more methane and mostly because they use more land and eat more of the earth. There are a lot of people who see efficiency in agriculture as kind of a dirty word but efficiency saves resources. And efficiency saves land, and that's really important. You write about how the Bezos Earth Fund invested in meat alternatives (which Lauren Sánchez, billionaire Jeff Bezo's wife, announced at the Aspen Conference in Miami Beach). Why hasn't it caught on and does it still have a future? The quick answer to the first question is, the dogs didn't like the food. There was a lot of excitement in 2019 when Beyond and Impossible got started as the first companies trying to grow vegan food for non-vegans, but they weren't better than meat. So people got excited about them, and they tried them, but they didn't keep going back. Beyond went from $250 a share to $2 a share. Impossible's still doing okay, because it's good. Plant-based meat which is grown in a fermenter from fungi comes out naturally meaty and shockingly healthy. That's just gotten started. Lab-grown meat, or cultivated meat they like to call it now, because, yeah, lab-grown sounds terrible, will be grown in a brewery, not a lab. I've eaten this stuff and it's great. It tastes like meat because it's meat. It's grown from actual animal cells. People aren't going to buy it because it's like, good for the planet. But our species is good at inventing stuff, and it can get better, it can get cheaper, it can get healthier, and then it can make a difference. Florida is the first state in the U.S. to ban lab-grown or cultivated meat. Is this a step backward? I mean, it's ridiculous. This is supposed to be the Free State of Florida, and they're telling us what kind of meat we can eat. And that's bull----. I can say that this shows the sort of danger for cultivated meat and meat alternatives being caught up in partisan culture wars. They've become 'woke' to eat. Since when do we think of technology that way? How can people change eating habits to make a difference in the climate? First eat less beef, and second waste less food. Because when you waste food, and we waste a quarter of our food, you waste the farmland that was used to grow the food, the fertilizer, the water, the labor – the world uses a landmass the size of China to grow garbage. If somebody says, what's the third thing, I would probably say, eat even a little less beef. You started and ended the book in the Everglades, why? We visited the water treatment wetlands that turned out to be an inadvertent great land and climate solution and wetland restoration, which is what Everglades restoration is all about. Turns out to be the best bang for the buck that you can get for the climate. I didn't want this to just be a Debbie Downer book. I'm writing about all these problems, and then I'm writing about all these solutions that haven't panned out yet. But, I do believe that things can get better. So I think part of the message is we've got to keep working on this stuff, and it's not like a guarantee that it's going to save the planet, but maybe some good stuff will happen. Ashley Miznazi is a climate change reporter for the Miami Herald funded by the Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Family Foundation and MSC Cruises in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners.

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