Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Anna Lappe

From the farm to your fork, what you eat has global ramifications

Leah Sottile
GET LIT! 2010

The Financial Lives of Poetry Readings
Get Lit! made Spokane a “literary capital.” Next year, the festival runs into its biggest funding challenge.


Read About:

Jess Walter & Richard Russo, Reza Aslan, Janet Fitch, Anne Lappe, Victor Lodato, Kevin Sampsell, Patricia Smith, Sallie Tisdale, Janet Wong


Selected Shorts
Three actors, three short stories about Father's Day.


Peripheral Events
Get Lit offers more than 50 events. Here's the best of the rest.

MAIN MENU >>

Best known for: Being the daughter of Frances Moore Lappe, author of the 1971 book Diet for a Small Planet; for co-founding the Small Planet Institute; and for writing Diet for a Hot Planet.

Most likely to be heckled by: Tea Partiers and fast food lovers

Most likely to dominate the Q&A session: Paul Haeder and other contentious greenies

Lappe's book summed up in a sentence: Ill help you draw a line between your pork chop, your Pop-Tart, and the rising mercury on the planets thermometer, taking you through the food chain. Its a chain of events we tend to be blind to when we pull up our shopping carts to the cereal aisle to ponder whether well go for Special K or Honey Toasted Oats.

Facts from her book that make you go, Hmmm:

  • By 2005, one in four of our food dollars was spent at Wal-Mart.
  • I also like to use the rule of thumb. If the ingredients list is longer than the width of your thumb retreat.
  • Americans today consume 222 pounds of red meat and poultry annually for every man, woman and child. That's more than three times the global average and roughly equivalent to an order of Chicken McNuggets, a Quarter Pounder, and a side of bacon every day of the year for every single one of us.

One reviewer said: Much of this will sound familiar to Michael Pollan's readers, and unfortunately, Lappe pales by comparison. Her stories tend to be shallow, unfinished, and sometimes marginally relevant, and her prose is sloppy. And although the book's message may have been ripe when Lappe began her research, extensive media coverage on the subject since may have put this book past its freshness date. (Publishers Weekly)

What Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation, said: As Anna Lappe reveals in this important book, we must be conscious of what we eat not only for our own health, but for the health of the planet. When it comes to climate change, junk food may prove even more destructive than S.U.V.s. Lappe's message is timely and empowering. Instead of waiting for politicians to do the right thing, we can make simple changes to our diet, enjoy it, and help change the world.

Anna Lappe discusses Diet for a Hot Planet: The Climate Crisis at the End of Your Fork and What You Can Do About It on Wednesday, April 14, at 7 pm at SCCs Lair Auditorium, Bldg. 6, Mission Ave. and Greene St. Free.

Also in Get Lit

Get Lit! 2010

The Financial Lives of Poetry Readings

Get Lit! made Spokane a “literary capital.” Next year, the festival runs into its biggest funding challenge.

Daniel Walters |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Walter & Russo

Jess Walter and the author of Empire Falls talk screenplays and pot-dealing

Michael Bowen |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Patricia Smith

Slam poetry about Hurricane Katrina, performed with live jazz accompaniment. Story

Natalie Johnson |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Victor Lodato

A playwright creates a coming-of-age novel about growing up with grief

Michael Bowen |
Wednesday, April 14,2010
Get Lit! 2010

Reza Aslan

How to end the "war on terror"? Realize Islamofascists are fighting a war over the next world, not this one.

Nicholas Deshais |
Wednesday, April 14,2010

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Wednesday, January 20,2010

DVD Review

Leah Sottile |
Wednesday, March 23,2005


 
 
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