Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food

Product Description
By the year 2050, Earth’s population will double. If we continue with current farming practices, vast amounts of wilderness will be lost, millions of birds and billions of insects will die, and the public will lose billions of dollars as a consequence of environmental degradation. Clearly, there must be a better way to meet the need for increased food production.
Written as part memoir, part instruction, and part contemplation, Tomorrow’s Table argues that a judicious blend of two important strands of agriculture–genetic engineering and organic farming–is key to helping feed the world’s growing population in an ecologically balanced manner. Pamela Ronald, a geneticist, and her husband, Raoul Adam… More >>
Tomorrow’s Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food
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Pam and Raul’s very well written book makes the rational and even emotional argument that biotechnology is fully compatible with the core ideals of the organic movement. I completely agree with that position looking back to my grandfather’s version of “organic” from the 1960s.
I wish I could believe that Pam and Raul’s logical arguments will fly with the core of the “organic consumer” movement. They make excellent rational arguments. I’m not sure this debate is about that. As Mark Twain said, “you can’t reason someone out of a position they weren’t reasoned into in the first place.”
As much as I wish otherwise, I’m not optimistic that this book will succeed in its aim to reconcile “organic” and “biotech”. Even so, it does a great job of explaining the societal benefits of biotech crops and it helps to humanize the people that have made this a reality.
This is a book that everyone focused on the environment should read.
Steven Savage, Ph.D.
savage.sd@gmail.com
Rating: 4 / 5
I made it through the book in a day or two. It is not overly technical; it is an excellent introduction to biotech and organic farming. I did not really get into the book until the last chapter; I guess I kept wishing for more technical information, for the authors to drive home their point of view.
However, the point they are trying to make cannot be more important. That is that biotech has a place in organic farming to make it more “sustainable”. RoundUp ready crops have made it possible for farmers to stop using much more damaging and toxic herbicides and to go to no-till farming to preserve topsoil. It is the only answer for some problems sometimes, such as virus resistance. It would allow conventional farmers of sweet corn to stop using a slew of really noxious insecticides.
Like Dr. Savage said in his review, I do not think that the organic farming movement is going to “hear” this message and see the wisdom in it, but if they could I think they would have to redefine the way they think of organic vs. sustainable.
Rating: 4 / 5
A partnership between organic farming and genetic engineering might sound impossible, but might be the best chance we have to feed our growing population while taking care of the planet.
Tomorrow’s Table is not a technical text. It is a friendly discussion with a friend who invites you over for lunch. In their conversational tone, the authors make a strong case for integrating genetic engineering into organic farming, leaving behind many aspects of so-called conventional farming. Their points are backed up by much research, and references are provided the reader so he or she can learn more if they like.
I hope this book will help some people to take a second look at genetic engineering, but it made me take a second look at organic farming. I had become convinced that organic farming was pointless and only for rich hippies. The discussion of the benefits of organic methods was more than enough to jolt me back to reality.
In the interests of full disclosure, I’m a PhD student in genetics, and was generally in favor of genetic engineering before reading this book.
Rating: 5 / 5
As a consumer who shops at grocery stores that specialize in organic food, I have noticed a proliferation of signs and labels stating that this or that product is GE or GMO free. These labels don’t do much to inform the public and do much to increase anxiety. This book is a great antidote; informative and detailed, clear and engaging.
Readers of recent books on the politics of food, such as Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver or The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan will be interested in the authors’ global perspective and local expertise, and I was especially glad to read about the potential impact of GE food in developing countries.
Rating: 5 / 5
I was given this book by a friend who is an organic “true believer” and when he handed me a book I sort of expect a re-hashing of the usual pro-organics arguments I’ve heard many times over the years. Instead I was pleasantly surprised.
The book is straight forward, well-reasoned, and accessible. I have a background in agriculture and molecular biology, and so at times I found the science a tad too simplistic to strongly hold my interest, but I suspect that for the average reader, it strikes a nice balance between addressing the subject fully and excessive complexity and jargon. The case they build is in my view quite compelling, and I hope this book serves to open many minds.
When I was starting out in plant science, I remember a professor telling me that when the first transgenics were being developed, he really thought the organics crowd would be the biggest supporters. “We’d just come up with a solution to their biggest problems, but instead they decided we were the enemy”. Although I think that organics are, ultimately, a positive development in agriculture, they are like most “movements” a mixture of real reasons and irrational, emotional impulses. Although organic agriculture has been an important step towards a sustainable future, it has brought with it a fair amount of baggage, based on not on science or reason, but on a nostalgic idealization of traditional agriculture–even though such agriculture was often neither natural nor sustainable nor especially desirable, even then. The fear of genetic engineering seems to me to come from that deeply conservative undercurrent in an otherwise progressive movement. By making the facts behind genetic engineering and its impacts on agriculture and environment accessible to a general audience, this book can hopefully be a step towards calming that reactionary impulse.
It helps too that it is also an easy and enjoyable read. By the end I felt as though I’d kind of gotten to know the authors (in fact since we don’t live all that far apart and work in vaguely the same field, it crossed my mind that I might someday bump into them). The style is casual without being superfluous, making it easy to lose yourself in the book. I started this book as I tended the grill before dinner, and finished it as I went to bed the same night.
Putting aside the genetic engineering part, even, this book is also simply one of the best scientific presentations of organic agriculture I have read, in that it is soundly grounded in the literature and does not over-reach, while remaining staunchly and reasonably pro-organic. There are few other books on the topic I can say the same for.
All in all a good read about an important topic.
Rating: 4 / 5