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

The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World by Michael Pollan Summary and Reviews

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

Book Review: Nature from a different perspective.
Summary: 3 Stars

An interesting, although not totally novel, perspective on the success of but four plants: apples, tulips, marijuana, and the potato, all of which hold a prominent place in our history. And all have an interesting story to tell, however, that story could have been told in much fewer words as Mr. Pollan's writing becomes a little tedious. Aside from that major fault I found much to learn here, about the individual plants, and their effect on our history. I admit though to be unconvinced with an allusion of conscious design provided the flora. I've noticed this consideration given by other authors, and wonder if it isn't it's own form of mania.

Book Review: Boy, did I learn a lot!
Summary: 5 Stars

Obviously, I still have a lot to learn. I found this book completely fascinating and anything I wasn't sure about I looked up and anything I became interested in I investigated. Great stuff! This was recommended reading for college biology.

Book Review: Enlightening, entertaining, easy to read...
Summary: 5 Stars

Excellent book! Do not need a science background to appreciate and understand the author's premise.

Book Review: The Dance of Dionysius and Apollo
Summary: 4 Stars

"The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World" ($13.95 in paperback from Random House) is by Michael Pollan, an instructor at the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley.

Pollan writes that "the seeds of this book were first planted in my garden. ... I happened to be sowing rows in the neighborhood of a flowering apple tree that was fairly vibrating with bees. And what I found myself thinking about was this: What existential difference is there between the human being's role in this (or any) garden and the bumblebee's?"

What follows are four long essays about co-evolution, in which "both parties act on each other to advance their individual interests but wind up trading favors: food for the bee, transportation for the apple genes." Agriculture is about human-plant co-evolution, Pollan says; "it makes just as much sense to think of agriculture as something the grasses did to people as a way to conquer the trees."

Each of the essays is about some kind of human desire. The apple represents sweetness (not very abundant in the Old West); the tulip is beauty (feeding tulipomania in Holland from 1635-1637); marijuana feeds the human desire for intoxication; and the potato is a symbol of the human desire to control the natural world.

The apple chapter focuses on John Chapman, "Johnny Appleseed," who "understood he was working for the apples as much as they were working for him." Pollan writes that until Prohibition, "apples were something people drank. ... Johnny Appleseed was bringing the gift of alcohol to the frontier." And that brings up a key theme in the book, the interplay between "Apollo" (reason) and "Dionysius" (ecstasy), between the garden and the wilderness.

The author samples high grade cannabis in Amsterdam and muses on the nature of the "high," something, he says, that melts away short term memory and explains "the sense that time has slowed or even stopped. For it is only by forgetting that we ... approach the experience of living in the present moment."

The potato is about biotechnology. Pollan writes of a Monsanto patent on the NewLeaf potato (since, apparently, withdrawn from market) which is bioengineered to contain a natural pesticide. That would cut down on the need for chemical sprays to protect potatoes, but it would also mean, unless great care were taken, that bugs would more quickly adapt to the NewLeaf variety (since spraying is only periodic but the potatoes them-selves are around for the entire season).

This is the dance of co-evolution. "The survival of the sweetest, the most beautiful, or the most intoxicating proceeds according to a dialectical process, a give-and-take between human desire and the universe of all plant possibility. It takes two, but it doesn't take intention, or consciousness." When it comes to plant and human, we are "in this boat together."

Book Review: Readable copy and interesting hypothesis.
Summary: 3 Stars

A long book on botany if you are up to it. For a more compact and lively study try The Story of the Apple.
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