The Garden of Invention: Luther Burbank and the Business of Breeding Plants
|
| List Price: | $25.95 |
| Price: | $17.13 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
77 new or used available from $3.67
Average customer review:Product Description
A wide-ranging and delightful narrative history of the celebrated plant breeder Luther Burbank and the business of farm and garden in early twentieth-century America
A century ago, Luther Burbank was the most famous gardener on the planet. His name was inseparable from a cornucopia of new and improved plants—fruits, nuts, vegetables, and flowers—for both home gardens and commercial farms and orchards. At a time when the science of genetics was in its infancy and agriculture was often a perilous combination of guess work and luck, many people wanted a piece of the man they called the Wizard of Santa Rosa.
As the United States moved from a nation of farms to a nation of city dwellers, the people behind the new products that transformed daily life were admired with a fervor that is not accorded to their present-day counterparts. Everyone knew and marveled at Samuel Morse’s telegraph, Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone, and Thomas Edison’s electric light. And like these other great American inventors, Burbank was revered as an example of the best tradition of American originality, ingenuity, and perseverance. Burbank had learned the secret of teaching nature to perform for man, breeding and crossbreeding ordinary plants from farm and garden until they were tastier, hardier, and more productive than ever before.
The Garden of Invention is neither an encyclopedia nor a biography. Rather, Jane S. Smith, a noted cultural historian, highlights significant moments in Burbank’s life (itself a fascinating story) and uses them to explore larger trends that he embodied and, in some cases, shaped. The Garden of Invention revisits the early years of bioengineering, when plant inventors were popular heroes and the public clamored for new varieties that would extend seasons, increase yields, look beautiful, or simply be wonderfully different from anything seen before.
The road from the nineteenth-century farm to twenty-first-century agribusiness is full of twists and turns, of course, but a good part of it passed straight through Luther Burbank’s garden. The Garden of Invention is a colorful and engrossing examination of the intersection of gardening, science, and business in the years between the Civil War and the Great Depression.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #304086 in Books
- Published on: 2009-04-16
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.12" h x 5.80" w x 8.55" l, 1.06 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781594202094
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Though as famous in his day as Thomas Edison, agricultural pioneer Luther Burbank (1849–1926) is little remembered; in this straightforward, engaging biography, author and historian Smith (Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine) recounts Burbank's life and its context, chronicling also agribusiness's turn-of-the-century growth and industrialization. Smith covers Burbank's rural New England childhood; the influence of Darwin on his horticultural ideas; his move to Santa Rosa, Calif.; and the establishment of his experimental gardens and nurseries. Amazingly, Burbank discovered independently the Mendelian principles that form the basis of genetics, and developed more than 800 varieties of fruits, nuts, vegetables and flowers. He made little money, largely owing to insufficient patent law (plants were not covered at the time) and his own paranoia, but he gained ample fame amid the 19th-century vogue for progress. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Jane S. Smith received her Ph.D. in English from Yale University and has taught at Northwestern University on topics ranging from twentieth-century fiction to the history of public health. Her history of the first polio vaccine, Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine, received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Science and Technology. She has served as a commentator, consultant, and writer for numerous documentary film projects. She works in a very small room with a very large window.
Customer Reviews
Food for Thought
Frankenfood, corn-powered cars, seedless oranges, and cloned cows--if you wonder how we got there from here, read "The Garden of Invention," which shares the story of plant pioneer Luther Burbank, inventor of dozens of famous and infamous fruits, vegetables, and flowers, including the Satsuma plum and Black Giant cherry, rainbow corn and elephant garlic, Shasta daisy and American Evening primrose--not to mention spineless cacti. In his own time (Burbank developed more than 800 new varieties between 1873 and 1925), he was as famous as Thomas Edison and Henry Ford, and hero to such diverse icons as Andrew Carnegie and Swami Paramahasa Yoganada. His legacy gave rise to "The Garden as Intellectual Property," as Smith titles her last chapter. This book is fun, fascinating, fast-reading food for thought.
California's answer to Gregor Mendel
The book isn't exactly a biography, but it tells the story of Luther Burbank, a man who was famous in his time for developing new plants, including the Russet potato and elephant garlic. Highly recommended for gardening fans, and still recommended, although with slightly less enthusiasm, for those of us who don't own a nursery.
Garden of Invention - a must read
Everyone who has read The Omnivore's Dilemma should read The Garden of Invention. This biography explains the start one hundred years of corporate food and factory farms.



