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OverviewIf you're a seafood lover, pick up this guide to which fish are the best for our bodies and which are best for the environment. -- San Francisco Chronicle Just when opting for omega-3-rich seafood is being recognized as one of the healthiest dietary choices a person can make, the news seems to be full of stories about mercury-laden tuna, shrimp contaminated with antibiotics, and diminishing fish stocks. Is it still even good for us? Bottomfeeder is the story of a seafood lover's round-the-world quest for a truly decent meal. A balanced and practical guide to eating--newly updated for the paperback edition--it explains which fish are best for the environment, the seas, and our bodies. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Taras GrescoePublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.617kg ISBN: 9781596912250ISBN 10: 1596912251 Pages: 327 Publication Date: 29 April 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Undefined Publisher's Status: Unknown Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviews<p>“If you're a seafood lover, pick up this guide to which fish are the best for our bodies and which are best for the environment.” —San Francisco Chronicle <p>“Research that brings muckraking books such as Fast Food Nation to mind.” —Seattle Post-Intelligencer <p>“From pollutants to piracy, preservatives to Patagonian toothfish, Grescoe surveys the state of our collective waterways in Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood, which combines some literal seabed muckraking with a fascinating travelogue…[An] aquatic The Omnivore's Dilemma.” —Gothamist <p>“Fascinating...will inform many about the dire state of the oceans, expose the dreadful environmental consequences of badly managed aquaculture, and prompt us to make better seafood choices...With clear, compelling writing, Grescoe covers a vast array of topics ranging from ecology (e.g. how overfishing affects ecosystems), cooki If you're a seafood lover, pick up this guide to which fish are the best for our bodies and which are best for the environment. --San Francisco Chronicle <p> Research that brings muckraking books such as Fast Food Nation to mind. --Seattle Post-Intelligencer <p> From pollutants to piracy, preservatives to Patagonian toothfish, Grescoe surveys the state of our collective waterways in Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood, which combines some literal seabed muckraking with a fascinating travelogue...[An] aquatic The Omnivore's Dilemma. --Gothamist <p> Fascinating...will inform many about the dire state of the oceans, expose the dreadful environmental consequences of badly managed aquaculture, and prompt us to make better seafood choices...With clear, compelling writing, Grescoe covers a vast array of topics ranging from ecology (e.g. how overfishing affects ecosystems), cooking and eating (a trip to a Japanese restaurant that serves whale meat), economics (the business of black-market cod), and history. --Ethicurean <p> Grescoe takes us on an international tour of controversial cuisines -- shark fin soup in China, whale sashimi in Japan, monkfish tail in New York City -- meanwhile offering an overview of the corrupt practices that have put the oceans (and our health) in danger. The portrait he paints is grim: oceanic dead zones that, because of pollution and overfishing, can no longer support organic life; salmon farms polluted by pesticides and disease; ruthless bottom trawlers with nets that can destroy entire ecosystems. A warning is not a death sentence, however. The book empowers consumers to ask the right questions -- if the halibut isfrom the Atlantic or Pacific, for instance, and whether the lobster pasta is actually made from monkfish, which is endangered. And asking these questions will make it possible to enjoy seafood for years to come. --Salon.com <p> Grescoe's tale hits all the right notes. It's an entree you'll remember. --Fortune Small Business <p> In this whirlwind, worldwide tour of fisheries, Grescoe (The Devil's Picnic) whiplashes readers from ecological devastation to edible ecstasy and back again. --Publishers Weekly <p> Bottomfeeder highlights the diversity, complexity, and fragility of our oceans. It's an important reminder that we all have to take better care of our oceans if we want seafood in our future. -- David Suzuki, co-founder, David Suzuki Foundation <p> <p> Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |