It's increasingly obvious that something about the way we eat isn't
right. This book demonstrates how one couple's strange and rather
drastic idea, to eat only local foods from within a 100-mile radius
of their southern BC home, can spark ideas all around the world.
The writing style is surprisingly easy to read and absorbing, their
ideas aren't always well thought out, and the drawbacks are
highlighted just as clearly as the successes. This isn't a book
encouraging you to undertake the challenge - it's about changing
the way you think about food, just a little bit.
Written in a personal and honest fashion, you can follow along with
their triumphs and discoveries, as well as commiserate at their
abject failures. It's all a grand experiment, one that makes you
think harder about farmer's markets and apple picking, cooking and
preserving. It's hard not to see how simple a few tiny steps would
be to improving the way we eat, without taking the drastic measures
the authors decided on. I highly recommend this to anyone concerned
about where their food comes from, what's in it, and how to eat
better, in every way.