Rhona McAdam is a poet, blogger and food writer. She has a master's in food culture and communications from L'UniversitA degli Studi di Scienze Gastronomiche (Bra, Italy), writes a food and poetry blog (Iambic Cafe), and for several years taught an online course in urban agriculture and food security for St. Lawrence College. Rhona lives in Victoria, British Columbia.
From community gardens and small plot farms, to individual front
and back yards, this book provides us with a glimpse into a
movement that is changing our world one bucket of compost, one
handful of seeds, one garden at a time.--Michael Ableman, Founder
of Cultivate Canada and author of Fields Of Plenty--
(10/15/2012)
McAdam not only gives us hope for tomorrow but ample ideas for
action and reminds us that often the simplest of things, like the
humble act of planting a seed, can be the most powerful.--Linda
Geggie, Co-ordinator of Capital Region Food and Agriculture
Initiatives Roundtable and Founder of LifeCycles-- (10/15/2012)
McAdam's tone is impassioned and unapologetic. She covers a barrage
of ideas and examples including spaces suited to growing, snippets
of food history, food sovereignty, examples of food related
community groups, and some of the challenges faced by urban
growers, such as finding a veterinarian for urban chickens. Then,
when considering the relationship of Canadians to their food, she
talks about the addiction to big-box stores, and how this leads to
decisions to purchase food on the basis of price alone. She boils
these disparate yet related threads down to a very simple goal,
saying, This manifesto is a less a breaking of new ground than a
re-examination of the rightness of the garden. Digging the City
seeds questions and shares ideas about the role urbanites can play
in the food system and in facilitating change.--Steven Biggs, Small
Farm Canada-- (10/15/2012)
This book helps us to understand how to become urban farmers and is
a good source of inspiration for those who wish to change the world
through food: a revolution that is good, simple and slow.--Carlo
Petrini, President and Founder of Slow Food International--
(10/15/2012)
This book is beautifully crafted, moving seamlessly from wonderful
and witty lyrical phrases to horrifying and shocking facts about
the food we eat. Covering theory as well as practice, it may make
you simultaneously angry, scared and inspired.--Jeanette Longfield,
Co-ordinator of Sustain and former Co-ordinator of the National
Food Alliance-- (10/15/2012)
This book stands out from other attempts to solve environmental
crises for being so engagingly written. It's a quiet book, a book
of sadness even through its anger, so it reads a little like a
manual, a little like a memoir, and a little like testimony. It's
personal, in the end, for all its careful detail about global
crises and about local crises from around the world, and I mean
that as praise for how neatly McAdam manages in Digging the City to
sound like she's chatting with her reader, rather than
lecturing.--Book Addiction-- (08/27/2012)
You don't need to be a "Guerrilla Gardener" to enjoy reading
Digging the City. The book is appealing for its personal narrative,
informative analysis, and for its contribution to the growing
literature on the sustainable food movement that seeks to change
the way we eat.--Susan Hawkins, The Coastal Spectator--
(10/27/2012)
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