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Eat the City
Eat the City: A Tale of the Fishers, Trappers, Hunters, Foragers, Slaughterers, Butchers, Farmers, Poultry Minders, Sugar Refiners, Cane Cutters, Beekeepers, Winemakers, and Brewers who Built New York | Robin Shulman
5 posts | 3 read | 5 to read
Traces the experiences of New Yorkers who grow and produce food in bustling city environments, placing today's urban food production in a context of hundreds of years of history to explain the changing abilities of cities to feed people. 30,000 first printing.
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review
Jasmineleah
Mehso-so

Some chapters—beekeeping and brewing—are fascinating; others worth skipping.

blurb
writerlibrarian
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I took today's emoji broader sense 🌽 as agriculture. Urban agriculture. Eat the City is a really good non fiction on urban farming in NY city. #emojinov

Librariana Sounds like a fabulous, fascinating book! Thank you for sharing it 😊 6y
33 likes2 stack adds1 comment
review
writerlibrarian
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Pickpick

Urban farming. Urban agriculture. A trendy and serious topic. Robin Shulman could have written an essay surfing on the 'hip' factor of the subject. Instead she chose to write about the people who are doing it, were doing it ages ago, people who do it to survive, to live differently. Well documented, yet easy to read and engaging essay on the many, many ways agriculture survived, adapted and sometimes thrived in New York City.

29 likes2 stack adds
blurb
writerlibrarian
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Bees. In the city, on roof tops. Honey from Queens or Brooklyn. Metaphorical 🐝 who sting and kill. Both are really good read. #insects #junebookbugs

quote
keithmalek

If you take the city's 5,701 flat, strong, large rooftops, you'd have 3,079 acres to plant vegetables. If you take 10 percent of the city's backyards and farm them modestly, you could feed about 72,000 people. If you build a 30 story high-rise vertical farm on a whole city block, 50,000 people could eat each year.

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