The Omnivores Dilemma
DeVry University
THE OMNIVORES DILEMMA2
Upon receiving a required reading assignment in my Advanced musical theme class of Michael Pollans book the Omnivores Dilemma, I thought, huge this sounds like a boring read. As I unfastened the book to read Part 1, Industrial: Corn, I show the author to be very descriptive, almost narrative in his surroundings. I was impressed by his knowledge of the subject of the American staple that we call clavus.
Pollan went on to describe how corn is in everything that we as humans consume of use in familiar life. Pollan made me think of how much corn that I myself consume, to a point II started looking through my own cupboards to dampen ingredients.
The author went into great detail into the intuition and anatomy of the corn plant.
Pollan described the origins of the plant and he went into, what this reviewer feels as an overkill, of the molecular structure that was like a high school science review that escalated to a college botany course. Pollan began talking about the perk up of corn and the germination process to a point that I was hearing late night Cinemax background music.
When the author travelled to the Iowa out-of-the-way(prenominal)m I found very interesting, as far as the description of the land, the sounds of the tractor and the feel of the weather. The history of the Naylor farm was fascinate on how the nature of farming has changed over time from when Mr. Naylors grandfather worked the land.If you want to get a full essay, order it on our website: Orderessay
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