0
    Living at Nature's Pace: Farming and the American Dream

    Living at Nature's Pace: Farming and the American Dream

    by Gene Logsdon, Wendell Berry (Foreword by)


    eBook

    (Revised edition)
    $25.00
    $25.00

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9781603580496
    • Publisher: Chelsea Green Publishing
    • Publication date: 02/01/2000
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 257
    • Sales rank: 140,570
    • File size: 829 KB

    Over the course of his long life and career as a writer, farmer, and journalist, Gene Logsdon published more than two dozen books, both practical and philosophical, on all aspects of rural life and affairs. His nonfiction works include Gene Everlasting, A Sanctuary of Trees, and Living at Nature’s Pace. He wrote a popular blog, The Contrary Farmer, as well as an award-winning column for the Carey, Ohio, Progressor Times. Gene was also a contributor to Farming Magazine and The Draft Horse Journal. He lived and farmed in Upper Sandusky, Ohio, where he died in 2016, a few weeks after finishing his final book, Letter to a Young Farmer.

    Table of Contents

    Foreword / Wendell Berry
    1. Green Fields, Red Ink
    2. For Amber Waves of Green
    3. Our Hidden Wound
    4. The Failure of Agricultural Education
    5. Traditional Farming
    6. Knowing One's Place
    7. The Future: More Farmers, Not Fewer
    8. An Ecologically Sane Farm
    9. Amish Economics
    10. A Horse-drawn Economy
    11. The Barn Raising
    12. Not So Friendly Persuasion
    13. A Patriarch Passes
    14. A Woodcutter's Pleasures
    15. The Pond at the Center of the Universe
    16. My Wilderness
    17. I'm Glad I'm Not a "Real" Farmer
    18. Going to Market on a Warm Day in November
    19. Looking for a Midwestern Culture
    20. The Folly of Trying to Repress the Agrarian Impulse
    21. The Wheel of Life Turns Round and Round

    Available on NOOK devices and apps

    • NOOK eReaders
    • NOOK GlowLight 4 Plus
    • NOOK GlowLight 4e
    • NOOK GlowLight 4
    • NOOK GlowLight Plus 7.8"
    • NOOK GlowLight 3
    • NOOK GlowLight Plus 6"
    • NOOK Tablets
    • NOOK 9" Lenovo Tablet (Arctic Grey and Frost Blue)
    • NOOK 10" HD Lenovo Tablet
    • NOOK Tablet 7" & 10.1"
    • NOOK by Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 [Tab A and Tab 4]
    • NOOK by Samsung [Tab 4 10.1, S2 & E]
    • Free NOOK Reading Apps
    • NOOK for iOS
    • NOOK for Android

    Want a NOOK? Explore Now

    For decades, Logsdon and his family have run a viable family farm. Along the way, he has become a widely influential journalist and social critic, documenting in hundreds of essays for national and regional magazines the crisis in conventional agri-business and the boundless potential for new forms of farming that reconcile tradition with ecology.

    Logsdon reminds us that healthy and economical agriculture must work "at nature's pace," instead of trying to impose an industrial order on the natural world. Foreseeing a future with "more farmers, not fewer," he looks for workable models among the Amish, among his lifelong neighbors in Ohio, and among resourceful urban gardeners and a new generation of defiantly unorthodox organic growers creating an innovative farmers-market economy in every region of the country.

    Nature knows how to grow plants and raise animals; it is human beings who are in danger of losing this age-old expertise, substituting chemical additives and artificial technologies for the traditional virtues of fertility, artistry, and knowledge of natural processes. This new edition of Logsdon's important collection of essays and articles (first published by Pantheon in 1993) contains six new chapters taking stock of American farm life at this turn of the century.

    Read More

    Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

    Recently Viewed 

    Roland Wulbert
    Logsdon is as impersonal as a politician seeking office in these essays on the small commercial farmer. The operant word is "commercial", for Logsdon is no gentleman farmer. Although he writes about the spiritual rewards of farming, he always counterposes to them the thoroughly material woes suffered by the small "food and fiber producer"--his term for farmer. Such attention to terminology bespeaks Logsdon's resistance to the conventional wisdoms of the agribusiness executive, the noble ecological farmer, and even his constituency, the vanishing commercial farmer. It indicates, too, three pervasive features of his writing: tough-mindedness, historical perspective, and close attention to particularities. Thus, when he discusses the decline of the small commercial farmer, he invokes not some vague urban alienation but the changing curriculum in the department of agriculture at Ohio State; and when he writes about small farmers, he describes in detail--skillfully enough to shame most professional ethnographers--extended conversations in the Pour House restaurant. So we take seriously his prophecy that small farming will revive. Even should it fail, his writing documents with rare honesty and perspicacity a calling that has become all but invisible to most of us.
    From the Publisher

    "To love farming--real farming--in this day and time requires what a lot of people like to call crankiness but is in fact courage. . . . I have been reading Gene Logsdon for many years, and I have always taken courage from him. I thank him, and I shake his hand."--Wendell Berry

    Sign In Create an Account
    Search Engine Error - Endeca File Not Found