Plants are an indispensable part of our everyday lives. From the coffee bean that gets roasted for our morning brew to the grasses that feed the animals we eat to the rubber tree that provides the raw materials used in the tires of our cars, we depend on plants for nearly every aspect of our lives.
With What Have Plants Ever Done for Us?, Stephen Harris takes readers step by chronological step through the role of plants in the rise of the Western world, with sojourns through the history of trade, travel, politics, chemistry, and medicine. Plants are our most important food source. Some, such as barley, have been staples since the earliest times. Others, like the oil palm, are relative newcomers to the Western world. Over time, the ways we use some plants has also dramatically Beets, a familiar sight on the dinner plate, were once thought to be an effective treatment for leprosy and now show significant promise as a sustainable biofuel. What, one wonders, might the future thus hold for the mandrake or woad? Plants have also held potent cures to some of our most prevalent diseases. An extract from the bark of the yew tree, for instance, is commonly used in the treatment of cancer.
Wide-ranging and thoroughly engaging, What Have Plants Ever Done for Us? will help readers cultivate a deeper appreciation for our branched and rooted friends who ask little in return for their vast contributions save for a little care and water.
This is an intriguing book - one which I have seen a number of references to but have only now finally got round to reading.
The book is essentially another book of lists - this time plants which have had significant historical relevance at some point even if now they have fallen from favour or been transferred been transferred to pop culture and superstition such as Mandrake.
The book is filled with all sorts of fascinating stories and descriptions - some of which you do not necessarily spot or think are as important as the author makes out - after all we have everything here from the founding fathers of modern medicine, the driving force behind modern commerce, to the specimen which helped forward modern genetic research.
My only criticism is that some of the entries loose their focus - now I am sure the author (after all look who published the book) are true experts in their field but like all popular science books they have to be accessible to the mere mortal as well - like me.
The book to me is a spring board in to further studies and exploration - I guess the problem with all books of this kind (and many other science tasters) is that there is only a finite number of pages - and the challenge is to decide where to stop. This book is perfect for dipping in and out of, it has a very comprehensive bibliography for further reading and covers a wealth of topics.
So although it would be a challenge to read it all in one its surprising how often I found myself going back to it to read a few more entries.
¿Somos nosotros los que hemos domesticado a las plantas? ¿O son ellas las que nos han domesticado a nosotros? Es una relación tan antigua y estrecha que convierte estas preguntas en una falsa disyuntiva. Quizá el mérito del recuento histórico de Harris es hacer sentir al lector la imposibilidad de la existencia humana sin la generosidad silenciosa de las plantas
Stephen Harris nos trae un libro que nos habla sobre cincuenta de las plantas que han dejado huella en la historia de la humanidad. En esta edición que además está acompañada por unos dibujos muy lindos nos encontramos con plantas que damos por sentadas en nuestra cotidianidad pero que tienen realmente mucha historia, como la papa que tuvo un papel importante en la hambruna que se vivió en Irlanda, el arroz, el té, o el caucho y el banano a los que se han asociado grandes masacres y desplazamientos, así que con plantas más conocidas y otras que seguramente te serán presentadas, este es un libro para leer poco a poco, con un lenguaje claro y con datos históricos bien interesantes.
This short book gives each plant four pages, enough to mention some of its uses (mostly food plants), introduction to the West (especially Britain) and current concerns or issues. Thus, it is a mile wide and an inch deep. Comparing it to Pollan's brilliant Botany of Desire is certainly unfair, but it is fair to regret the complete lack of any unifying theme. Although I relished the chapter (4 pages) on nutmeg and a few others, I probably would have gotten more out of spending my time reading the entries in Wikipedia or a more focused history, such as the Columbian Exchange
Tenía todo el potencial para ser un gran libro pero tiene errores y omisiones que dificultan innecesariamente la lectura y su comprensión.
En algunas plantas, por ejemplo, no hace la distinción correcta entre género y especie y no sé si es peor que el error venga del traductor o del mismo autor. Parte también del supuesto de que los lectores son especializados y manejan términos, conceptos y procesos botánicos, así que los menciona y no los explica.
Cincuenta plantas importantes en el desarrollo de la humanidad, seguramente no son las únicas. Más allá de esta descripción de botánica, evolución y domesticación de especies se plantean preguntas interesantes respecto a los retos de conservación, necesidades de la humanidad, seguridad alimentaria y una visión del planeta por occidente y por oriente. Se aprende bastante con este libro.
An enjoyable night time read, each plant got a page or two or three and little drawing. The plants history was detailed and its uses. Perhaps boring from the outside, but some lesser thought of plants many people don't care about the history. I do. I want to know that wars were fought over plants.
“Las personas son guardianas del conocimiento sobre las plantas. Sin embargo, cuando los vínculos entre generaciones se pierden, también puede perderse este conocimiento" Harris, Stephen