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Book Review: Digging the City by Rhona McAdam

Our 2012 backyard garden, mid-July

Like other titles in the very readable manifesto series published by Rocky Mountain Books, Digging the City is an eye-catching, brain-expanding, well-balanced read. The description of our global, price-driven, nutrient-poor, energy-intensive food industry could be overwhelmingly depressing, but Rhona McAdam carefully outlines steps each of us can take to improve food safety and security. Citing the success of war-era Victory Gardens, current day allotment gardens in England and widespread, organic urban agriculture in Cuba, she makes the case that we all have the right to good food. And we all have a role to play in the supply of good food, whether we grow a pot of fresh herbs on our counter, a container of tomatoes on our deck or we’re ready to build, plan, plant, nurture and harvest a raised bed vegetable garden.

A few short excerpts describing the challenge:

Most the book is dedicated to steps we can take to improve Canada’s food security:

Our youngest son attends a school that has joined forces with the local community association to run a community gardening program. The students are involved in planning and planting some of the garden plots. Community members water, weed and nurture the plots during the six-week summer break. And students return to school in time to help with the harvest (and share the fruits of their labour with community members). I hope we’ll see more programs like this as schools across the country increasingly focus on student comprehensive wellness.

I’ve identified several personal action items as a result of reading this book:

RATING: 5 out of 5 stars. This is a quick and informative read. If you like to eat, you owe it to yourself to learn more about why it’s worth giving some thought to food security. And it’s quite likely that McAdam will plant at least a few ideas in your mind – small steps you can take to improve your food choices. You may even be inspired to try growing some (more) food!

RECOMMENDED: For those with an interest in food safety, nutrition, wellness, food security, gardening, how gardening can help build community and/or becoming more self-sufficient.

RMB Manifestos are “meant to be literary, critical and cultural studies that are provocative, passionate and populist in nature. The goal is to encourage debate and help facilitate change whenever and wherever possible.” Currently, the collection includes about a dozen titles, some of which I’ve borrowed from my local branch of the Calgary Public Library. Rocky Mountain Books kindly sent me another half-dozen or so for review (including this one).

If you’d like to read more from Rhona McAdam, you can find her on facebook, her blog, or on Twitter @iambiccafe.

I’d like close by posing this question from page 95. If food isn’t worth making noise about, what is? I’m ready to make some noise! Are you?

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