Letter to a young farmer How to live richly without wealth on the new garden farm

Gene Logsdon

Book - 2017

In his final book of essays - completed just weeks before he died - self-described "contrary farmer" Gene Logsdon addresses the next generation of small-scale "garden farmers" seeking a better way of life.--COVER.

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Subjects
Published
White River Junction, Vermont : Chelsea Green Publishing [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Gene Logsdon (author)
Other Authors
Wendell Berry, 1934- (writer of foreword)
Physical Description
xiv, 210 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781603587259
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • 1. No Such Thing as "The American Farmer"
  • 2. Farming Is All About Money, Even When It Isn't
  • 3. The Economic Decentralization of Nearly Everything
  • 4. The Ripening of a "Rurban" Culture
  • 5. The Barns at the Center of the Garden Farm Universe
  • 6. Backyard Sheep
  • 7. Hauling Livestock: The Ultimate Test of Your Farming Mettle
  • 8. The Cow Stable: Health Spa of the Future
  • 9. The Rise of the Modern Plowgirl
  • 10. Finding and Keeping a New Age Farm Partner
  • 11. Big Data and Robot Farming
  • 12. The Invasion of the Paranoids
  • 13. One Cow's Forage Is Another Cow's Poison
  • 14. Pasture Farming as Part of Garden Farming
  • 15. The Wild-Plant Explorers
  • 16. The Most Stubborn Farmer of Us All
  • 17. Have We Deflowered Our Virgin Soils?
  • 18. The Resurrection of a Really Free Market
  • 19. Artisanal Food in the New Age of Farming
  • 20. Why Fake Steak Won't Ever Rule the Meat Market
  • 21. The Homebodies
  • 22. If Michelangelo Had to Drive to Work
  • 23. A Fable About the End of "Get Big or Get Out"
  • 24. The Real Background Behind the Fading of Industrial Farming
  • 25. In Praise of Rural Simplicity (Whatever That Is)
Review by Choice Review

A longtime popular commentator on small-scale agriculture, Logsdon has over two dozen books to his credit, including The Contrary Farmer (CH, Nov'94, 32-1496) and The Mother of All Arts: Agrarianism and the Creative Impulse (CH, Nov'07, 45-1447). Completed shortly before his death in 2016, the volume under review consists of 25 short essays, some whimsical, some lyrical, but all with the concrete imagery that characterizes Logsdon's world view of agriculture. Readers familiar with Logsdon may assume he takes a partisan approach on the issues surrounding the chasm between industrial and small-scale "garden" farming, but a closer reading finds him not strident in his approach and keenly aware of the challenges to the way of life he advocates. The book might have benefited from a brief bibliography, not so much to identify direct references but rather because Logsdon's rich experience and wide-ranging knowledge allow him to refer frequently to significant yet not well-known works in agriculture. Because of Logsdon's place in the world of agricultural commentary and his graceful and accessible style, the book will fit all general popular or academic collections, particularly those emphasizing sustainability, rural sociology, and public policy. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --Lynn S. Cline, Missouri State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

If Logsdon (1932-2016) had his way, the term contrary farmer would have been every bit as familiar as country farmer. A learned proponent of stay in and stay small garden farming, Logsdon's outspoken outlook was completely in opposition to the practices and philosophies of corporate agribusiness. Instead of encouraging farmers to go big or get out by adding more property, more machinery, and more debt, Logsdon championed the idea of working on a more personal scale that allows farmers to appreciate nature and honor tradition while still accepting technology and innovation. In this posthumously published book of essays, Logsdon extols the virtues of finding a good mate, praises the pluck and professionalism of women farmers, and enthuses about the health benefits of a day in the barn. Along with other hard-earned advice about hauling livestock, pasturing chickens, and controlling weeds, Logsdon's lifetime of farming wisdom is firmly lodged in common sense. Sagacious and sly, practical and poetic, Logsdon's voice may have been contrarian but it was never condescending.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Late Ohioan farmer Logsdon (Gene Everlasting: A Contrary Farmer's Thoughts on Living Forever) sends a meaningful (though poorly titled) message to up-and-coming homestead farmers. Written during the late stages of an illness that would take the author's life in 2016, the book stands as his final assertion and rallying cry against the misguided notion, so prevalent at one time, that farmers needed to "get big or get out." The book isn't written in the intimate style of a personal missive as the title suggests; it's more of an essay collection squarely addressing topics such as small-scale economics, pasture farming, raising sheep, and the "modern plowgirl," with practical-minded advice throughout. This work serves as a guiding light and lodestar for farmers facing the modern challenges of any farming operation, large or small. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

Young farmers are having a moment. These books of essays from legendary names are full of practical advice for those getting started in farming. More than that, they are apologia for the small farmer and a celebration of wisdom transferred among generations. Just like James Rebanks's best-selling A Shepherd's Life, the message in these titles is that farming is hard, important, and needs to be taken seriously and thoughtfully (though with appropriate humor). Farmers, young and old, are speaking up for themselves, and everyone who eats can learn something from them. The Stone Barns Center is a nonprofit that works to improve American farming, foodways, and soil. With Letters, it has compiled advice to young farmers from an impressive array of writers from various backgrounds, including international and urban. Some contributors take the writing assignment more literally than others do, but by including farmers, chefs, activists, and entrepreneurs, the essays form a cohesive vision of contemporary farming, including real solutions for problems such as climate change and jobs in rural areas. Farmer, blogger, and journalist Logsdon's (Gene Everlasting; A Sanctuary of Trees) book takes the same tack, with advice based on personal experience and a deep knowledge of farm literature. It is a useful companion to the Stone Barns offering, putting its contributors in context. Logsdon wrote humorous accounts of small-scale farming for decades, and finished this book just weeks before his death in 2016. As a self-styled "contrary farmer," he tells it as he sees it, and his personality shines through in the idiosyncratic conclusions. His portrait of rural America provides much-needed nuance to the rhetoric prevalent in politics lately. VERDICT Anyone who gardens, particularly for food, will take something away from these books. Actual farmers may not need the advice but will appreciate the pep talk.-Margaret Heller, Loyola Univ. Chicago Libs. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An elegant, modern georgic in prose by "contrary farmer" Logsdon (Gene Everlasting, 2013, etc.).Of a piece with the works of Wendell Berry, Wes Jackson, and other modern back-to-the-landers, Logsdon's last book (he died in May 2016) comprises a set of essays addressed to an imagined young person contemplating a life in the fields. "There's no such thing as the American farmer," counsels the author at the outset. Instead, there are beet farmers, dairy farmers, flower farmers, marijuana farmers, and even "moonshine farmers," which makes it difficult to categorize all the different kinds of farmers and to subsume them into any meaningful political organization. The point is that because there is so much diversity in farming, anyone with intelligence, gumption, and stick-to-itiveness shouldn't be dissuaded from having a go at it. Of course, there are plenty of reasons not to farm, and Logsdon isn't shy of enumerating the challenges, from the fiscal and physical ones to matters that embrace even the heart: one of his essays concerns how to find a suitable helpmeet out in the sticks, where, as a former seminarian, he discovered "there were girls peeking out from behind every crossroads stop sign in the county." Times change, but the struggle continues, one aspect of it the corporatization of farming. Oddly, there Logsdon finds an ally in the chain restaurateur Bob Evans, who encouraged those who would listen to invest in biological over mechanical solutions, saying, "tractors don't have babies." Logsdon is encouraging without being Pollyannaish, homespun while also sometimes arch: "On the occasions when I have had to travel in city traffic, the thought always occurs to me that people who must commute into cities to work spend about as much time just waiting for traffic lights to change as it takes me to write a book." From raising cattle to organizing markets, there's much value here for every aspiring farmer, whose work requires brains along with brawn. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.