The Last Hunger Season: A Year in an African Farm Community on the Brink of Change
Autor Roger Thurowen Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 mai 2013
At
4:00
am,
Leonida
Wanyama
lit
a
lantern
in
her
house
made
of
sticks
and
mud.
She
was
up
long
before
the
sun
to
begin
her
farm
work,
as
usual.
But
this
would
be
no
ordinary
day,
this
second
Friday
of
the
new
year.
This
was
the
day
Leonida
and
a
group
of
smallholder
farmers
in
western
Kenya
would
begin
their
exodus,
as
she
said,
“from
misery
to
Canaan,”
the
land
of
milk
and
honey.
Africa’s
smallholder
farmers,
most
of
whom
are
women,
know
misery.
They
toil
in
a
time
warp,
living
and
working
essentially
as
their
forebears
did
a
century
ago.
With
tired
seeds,
meager
soil
nutrition,
primitive
storage
facilities,
wretched
roads,
and
no
capital
or
credit,
they
harvest
less
than
one-quarter
the
yields
of
Western
farmers.
The
romantic
ideal
of
African
farmers––rural
villagers
in
touch
with
nature,
tending
bucolic
fields––is
in
reality
a
horror
scene
of
malnourished
children,
backbreaking
manual
work,
and
profound
hopelessness.
Growing
food
is
their
driving
preoccupation,
and
still
they
don’t
have
enough
to
feed
their
families
throughout
the
year.
Thewanjala––the
annual
hunger
season
that
can
stretch
from
one
month
to
as
many
as
eight
or
nine––abides.
But
in
January
2011,
Leonida
and
her
neighbors
came
together
and
took
the
enormous
risk
of
trying
to
change
their
lives.
Award-winning
author
and
world
hunger
activist
Roger
Thurow
spent
a
year
with
four
of
them––Leonida
Wanyama,
Rasoa
Wasike,
Francis
Mamati,
and
Zipporah
Biketi––to
intimately
chronicle
their
efforts.
InThe
Last
Hunger
Season,he
illuminates
the
profound
challenges
these
farmers
and
their
families
face,
and
follows
them
through
the
seasons
to
see
whether,
with
a
little
bit
of
help
from
a
new
social
enterprise
organization
called
One
Acre
Fund,
they
might
transcend
lives
of
dire
poverty
and
hunger.
The
daily
dramas
of
the
farmers’
lives
unfold
against
the
backdrop
of
a
looming
global
challenge:
to
feed
a
growing
population,
world
food
production
must
nearly
double
by
2050.
If
these
farmers
succeed,
so
might
we
all.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610392402
ISBN-10: 161039240X
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: includes an 8-pp. B/W photo insert on text
Dimensiuni: 146 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:First Trade Paper Edition
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 161039240X
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: includes an 8-pp. B/W photo insert on text
Dimensiuni: 146 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:First Trade Paper Edition
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Roger
Thurowis
a
senior
fellow
for
Global
Agriculture
and
Food
Policy
at
the
Chicago
Council
on
Global
Affairs.
He
was,
for
thirty
years,
a
reporter
at
theWall
Street
Journal.
He
is,
with
Scott
Kilman,
the
author
ofEnough:
Why
the
World’s
Poorest
Starve
in
an
Age
of
Plenty,
which
won
the
Harry
Chapin
Why
Hunger
book
award
and
was
a
finalist
for
the
Dayton
Literary
Peace
Prize
and
for
the
New
York
Public
Library
Helen
Bernstein
Book
Award.
He
is
a
2009
recipient
of
the
Action
Against
Hunger
Humanitarian
Award. He
lives
near
Chicago.