more like a The chapters about the growing and manufacture of cotton were good as were the chapters on GMO and trade disparities, However, the multiple chapters on jeans, music and pop culture all struck such sour notes I almost tossed the book then and there, Really this book could have used a better editor,
Not normally a topic I have any interest in, I did learn a lot in reading this book, It was myndyear anniversary gift from my husband yearis a cotton gift and therefore, it is a book I will cherish forever and may even reread at one point it does contain a lot of newtome info about cotton/cotton things.
A very interesting book about the history of cotton, not just in the US but abroad as well, From the cotton mills in England to the early factories in the northern United States, it's informative, wellwritten, and flows nicely, The author also describes how cotton production was a contributing factor leading up to the American Civil War, and goes into great detail about how that changed after the war and the infestation of the boll weevil.
Probably the best thing about this book is the depth of the author's research and the volume of information I learned about cotton while reading how it's grown, gathered, processed, and manufactured, and how much we rely on it as a part of our lives.
I enjoyed learning about the different businessmen and inventors who brought the crop into our homes as furniture and clothing, A very accessible and interesting read, Wow. Never knew cotton brought so much pain and suffering on one hand and fame and fortune on the other, Great book telling about two basic strains of cotton, history of Britain taking India over cotton, how cotton influenced the Civil War and how inventors made fortunes making machines to process it.
The chapter on the fight against the boll weevil that really was just mostly solved just recently, Amazing book. Awful. Poorly researched, a Babel Tower of author's assumptions metamorphosed in theorems, claims without support by rigorous research and arbitrary statements that confuse any honest reader.
I was lucky I did not have to pay for this book, somebody was discarding it, so I thought it would be cool to read a "biography of cotton" for free.
Wrong I got what I paid for, then paid with my wasted time,
Let's start with the end what this book is not, The author writes in "Acknowledgements": "Tracing the journey of cotton over,years of human history, . . " HUH This thing is not nearly what the author pretends it is, This hoola boola about writing a monography BIOGRAPHY OF COTTON phew, . . of the plant, this is absolute nonsense, The author might have tried to pretend that he wrote a story of the AMERICAN cotton, . . but that too would fail the test, since the whole effort is so uneven and trying,
There is extremely little in terms of history of the cotton in ancient times and/or in modern times outside USA, The feeble effort is so questionable, in my mind, I had to interrupt myself several times to go do research on my own, afraid that I am going to be left over with incorrect, incomplete or missing info on the subject.
That worked for a while, till I got tired after all, I am not going to write a book on correcting this guy here,
I was left with the distinct feeling that the author abused Wikipedia to write this aside from his tennis partners, He might think in his euphoria that he wrote a masterpiece, To me, it is garbage, The one star is a compliment, My advice to anyone else: Search the libraries, put forth some effort, there must be better encyclopedic books on cotton out there, Or else, end up like me, reading with one eye and searching for accurate info with the other, June selection for museum's book club
If the rest of the book holds up to the promise of the firstpages, we're in for a treatand a great discussion.
. .
The rest of the book did indeed hold up, While some of the descriptions of the various weaving equipment confused me, the personalities involved with the early textile industry were fascinating, MUch of it felt very familiar, especially once we got to slavery and sharecropping, but the last two chapters on modern farming, nanotechnology and pesticides blew me away.
Lots of good history with some humor thrown in, You'll have new respect for the shirt on your back,
I enjoyed this read although there were some chapters in the book that were more interesting The chapter on jeans and denin and their manufacture to the rise of the clothing chain was interestingand showed that nothing happens in a vacuum.
The movie industry and the popularity of westerns gave this industry a sexiness that has carried on thru decades, This book is less of an exhaustive history of cotton and more of a collection of interesting perspectives which are at least somewhat linked to cotton.
Each chapter could really stand on its own and it would probably make for a better to read to just pick up one chapter at a time at your convenience.
While Yafa may not be a great historian, he is an entertaining writer, His chapter on denim was particularly engaging and I was completely creeped out by his description of boll weevils, You're thinking, "he read a book about cotton How lame is that" Well you would be wrong this is quite a fascinating book, I had no idea that the wonder fiber has had such an impact on human history and culture, But we do all wear clothes so I guess it should not be a surprise, The desire to control cotton led Britain to over run India, THey then halted Indian spinning and sent the cotton to England where mill towns did the spinning and weaving, Cotton also shaped the American economy at the birth of the nation, being the major cash crop, The cotton gin allowed a vast increase in cotton production and this was the major force behind slavery, Later, cotton jeans spearheaded a standardization of dress around the world, Cotton was one of the first genetically engineered crops and led to a situation where farmers rent seeds since they are forbidden by contract from harvesting and reusing the GM ones.
It is an interesting story indeed, Nice overview of the plant, changes in farming and weaving techniques over the centuries, Place cotton at the center of industrialization for both the U, K. and the U. S. and their respective national and international trade and politics for most of theth andth centuries, Leaves a little to be desired when it gets to looking at modern trade policies and politics, but a solid example of modern popular history focusing on one thread of history, or one fiber in this case.
This is pretty much exactly what you think it is going to be: A big ol' history of cotton, The author is from Lowell, Mass, the original home of American cotton manufacturing, As a result of this, the book has a certain US perspective, but still examines the global ramifications of international cotton trade, from early times to today's China trade conundrum.
I thought the one thing lacking from this book was the environmental disruptions of cotton growing, Most of the discussion of harsh pesticides and GMO cotton was told from a past tense, Little discussion of the toll cotton still takes on the land and how it is being grown in areas that don't naturally support cotton Texas and Oklahoma.
But overall, this was an interesting read and illuminating in many ways, The implications of cotton, politically, historically and environmentally are massive and mind blowing, I would recommend this to fans of historical nonfiction, especially readers of microhistories, This is not a good book, It barely talks about the biological properties or cultivation of the plant, it's a biography of cotton manufacture, and is most definitely a crummy homage to the author's hometown, Lowell, MA.
The writing style is really eyerolling, I had a lot of trouble forging my way through it for most of the book, This guy writes like ayear old in creative writing class, it's over the top in many ways, The editing is horrible too, there are many meandering paragraphs, and at one point, Yafa says "cotton requires heat, warmth, and moisture, " That sentence alone made me grumble out loud, This is a terrible book, This whole book pulls cotton way out of context and I was unhappy reading it, Not quite to the level of "Oranges" by McPhee or "Botany of Desire" by Pollard, but still and interesting timelinebased walkthrough of the history of this adaptable and applicable fiber plant.
Read this for the Civil War historical basis, but was interesting to know evolution of this textile and how it replaced wool in Western world.
Towards end of book, Yafa gets a bit activist and focused a bit too much on genetics and the WTO contestbased protests of, I was given this book as a gift and did find it an enjoyable and informative history of cotton in the United States, While the book does briefly touch on cotton in other cultures, it is primarily a UScentric history, There was also plenty of sexism, racism, and classism, If you're looking for a history of cotton in the USA, this book is worth picking up, If you want a world history, look elsewhere, You are what you wear, Or read. Or eat. Or something like that. In the spirit of recent books like Salt and Coal, A novelist and playwright, Yafa examines world history through the prism of a tiny little fiber called cotton.
He touches on everything from science and economics to race and popular culture, painting nuanced portraits of cotton's farreaching effects on the English mill system, B.
B. King's blues, and controversies over bioengineering, among other topics, It's a good, solid history, but at times Yafa veers into unrelated topics, He also overgeneralizes, especially when it comes to politics and current events, Yet, as Yafa shows, cotton spurred great battles and changed the worldand continues to do so today, This is an excerpt from a review published in sitelinkBookmarks magazine, This is a wonderful nonfiction book, It reads like a historical novel and touches on economics, history, race, botany and fashion, Who would have thought that a simple plant could have such influence on human history There are so many interesting facts that I was soon overwhelmed.
Great book for historians, trivia freaks and cocktail party oneuppers, It complements the other Penguin book, Coal, which has the same farreaching sweep for combustible rocks, Both are great reads makes you feel virtuous about reading such a condensed history instead of a zombie book, . . This book is well written and aimed at a general audience, The author covers the vast ground of the subject by combining significant episodes in the shifting production and use of cotton over the last few centuries with biographical sketches inventors, factory owners, mill girls etc.
The strategy is a good one in that it grounds an economic story in human lives, but it makes the author's treatment of some of the subjects perhaps less agile than might be wished.
Chapters tend to lean heavily on one or two sources a diary, a set of court papers etc, to provide the enlivening human element, Some times a little too much weight is placed on the historical importance of the individuals involved, The myth of the Eli Whitney's pivotal role in world history strides pretty boldly across the relevant chapter for instance, All in all not bad though, Living in the south, while traveling I've seen plucked cotton fields, My husband, as a child, actually picked cotton and described to me his bleeding hands and feet, and torn clothing from this work, so I grabbed this book to find out more.
In college I had studied the Civil War so was aware of the economic part of slavery and the Confederacy/Union, But I'd never thought about the byproducts of cotton picking in the modern world, such as the Blues and Jazz in music, for instance, Certainly I'd thought about man's inhumanity to man in such endeavors, But Mr Yafa made me aware of global economy, from India and Gandhi, to Africa, Very thought producing book. Fabulous read. Couldn't put it down. Read it in two days, Big Cotton will appeal to anyone
who:
Wants to better understand slavery in America
Has ever enjoyed sewing, knitting, or weaving
Has ever tried to make sense of farm/crop subsidies
Has ever fallen in love with a favorite pair of blue jeans
Appreciates an author with a pithy, dry sense of humor
Mary E.
Rossow My interest in this book began when I visited the National Museum of the American Coverlet in Bedford, PA, and saw it in the bookstore the museum had a neat exhibit of antique spinning wheels on display when I went.
I've never been into cotton as a material for spinning or knitting, but I'm fine with reading about it,
A few facts in the first quarter of the book which unfortunately I did not mark struck me as wrong, given my knowledge of fiber stuff, so I felt like I had to take a lot of the book with a grain of salt.
The author bio notes that Yafa writes for Playboy and The Rolling Stone, so it seems likely he didn't know much about cotton before beginning this book still, I could be wrong!
But setting all that aside, I found this book interesting especially the first half, which went over the ancient history of cotton up through the industrial revolution.
The author grew up in Lowell, Massachusetts, so Lowell got a lot of page time as it should, Some of Yafa's tangents, like blues songs about boll weevils, seemed a little far afield but the boll weevil was interesting!, I skimmed quite a bit at the end, until the section about ecocotton caught my attention again and I slowed down, That part certainly made me think twice about my own clothing,
If you like these nonfiction treatments of a single plant or animal, this book could be right up your alley, A good book in the tradition of Simon Garfield, . . a trip through the ages with cotton fiber as the focus, I would recommend for anyone who enjoys traveling through history one product at a time, The author takes you from the Middle Ages through the early millennium, ending with biotechnology and fair labor practices, Although I am familiar with the story, it was a good romp through history with interesting biographies of individuals to enhance the story, .
Earn Cotton: The Biography Of A Revolutionary Fiber Generated By Stephen Yafa Offered In Physical Book
Stephen Yafa