Seeds, Sex and Civilization

Author(s): Peter Thompson; Stephen Harris

Gardening

Seeds have influenced evolution, and for millennia they have influenced and sometimes determined where and how we live. This is an epic tale, given added enchantment by the fact that to most of us seeds mean little more than tiny objects in paper packets: who thinks first of rice, wheat, coffee, nuts, peas, beans, or olives? Here, Peter Thompson unfolds the absorbing history of how, after centuries of investigation, we finally discovered what seeds do and how they work.

This is a scientific detective story with heroes and heroines following clues and finding answers. Thompson brings to life the eccentrics, explorers, amateurs, and highly dedicated professionals who have accumulated our knowledge. Some are well known, such as Charles Darwin and Gregor Mendel; others, like the Russian geneticist Nikolai Vavilov, are less so. The seeds also have a story and appear to have personalities, ambitions, and "stratagems" of their own.

The book concludes with a chapter by Stephen Harris on current debates about genetically modified crops, seed conservation, and plant ownership in the contemporary world.

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9780500251706
  • : Thames & Hudson
  • : 44536
  • : 0.56699
  • : 24 August 2010
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : 280
  • : 631.521
  • : English
  • : 1
  • : Hardback
  • : Peter Thompson; Stephen Harris