Reviews
A compelling case for a crucial change to a plant-based diet in order to halt the impending crisis.
The author does an admirable job of backing up this thesis and has done a good job of convincing this reader to begin making better dietary choices. For a start: Meatless Mondays anyone?
Belongs in any culinary and social issues collection and offers assessments of the moral and ethical implications of dietary choices.
Anand Saxena is a new name on the veg author roster, and thankfully so. Saxena is a retired biophysicist, yet writes with the smooth, readable prose of a gifted wordsmith. The Vegetarian Imperative focuses mainly on two areas: the effects of what we eat on the ecosystem, and the benefits of plant foods on human health. Saxena references the most recent science and produces convincing arguments that the environment will be in trouble if we continue on our current path, and that veggies are good for your health. The message isn’t new, but the voice is, and the hope here is that Imperative will reach the academics on campus who aren’t targeted by Vegan Outreach.
A timely and crucial discussion of the human food supply. People interested in the environment know that a vegetarian diet requires about one-third less fossil energy and cropland to produce food needs, as compared to the average American diet. The vegetarian diet is environmentally sound—and is an imperative.
Making a connection between the consumption of meat, a central food item of the American diet, and environmental degradation on a global scale is not simple. Yet that is what Anand Saxena does in this book. In a comprehensive mapping of the current industrial food system, he establishes the imperative for change.
Book Details
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Farms
2. Environment
3. Land
4. Water
5. Fish
6. Resources
7. Health
8. Dairy
9. Suffering
10. Consequences
Epilogue
Notes
Index