Sunday, 18 February 2024

Millennial Vegan by Casey T Taft – Book Review

 


Publisher’s write-up:

‘Millennials, people between the ages of 15 and 34, make up nearly half of the current vegan population. Despite being dealt a bad deal by prior generations, this generation is increasingly able to see past all the ways our society indoctrinates us to use nonhuman animals.

Millennial Vegan offers support to this important group by providing tips for advocacy, strategies for communicating with unsupportive peers, advice on issues related to dating, and information on maintaining personal wellbeing. The movement for nonhuman animals depends on the support of millennials, and this guide will help this already aware group maximize their ability to be the best vegan advocates they can be.’

Millennial Vegan is a book on navigating everyday life as a young vegan written by the clinical psychologist Casey T Taft. This book deals with various aspects of life that a young person would go through while being a vegan – be it with parents, at school, facing bullying, or choosing relationships.

This book is split into chapters that are easy to navigate and also deals with some of the most common questions that vegans face – such as ‘how people get their proteins’ (a myth that has been debunked several times), and also the bullying one might face in school as a result of that. He also talks about the anger that one could have, given that being a vegan, one has already seen several atrocities on non-human animals, and also how the system is quite rigged against millennials, when it comes to the cost of living or the price of property.

Despite the book being well presented, I wonder whom the author was targeting and if he was merely preaching to the choir, if this book was meant to be read only by people who are already vegan. Moreover, I felt that the author used millennial interchangeably with ‘teenager’ and I feel the latter and their parents would have been the most appropriate target audience for this book. This is considering how the author did not talk about dynamics at the workplace, social events as to how to politely decline a non-vegan snack offered, or even bullying faced from adults.

As a vegan myself, to me it was an easy read but again, I was uncomfortable with the author’s assumption that the only reason why any person becomes vegan is over compassion for animals – while that is true of many; to me the clinching argument was the environment and for many others, there could be several other reasons – or a combination of many as not all of them are mutually exclusive either.

To conclude, I had an enjoyable, quick read, mostly content that I already agreed with and could relate to many of the situations that the author spoke about, but it could have tried to reach a wider audience. On that note, I award the book a rating of six on ten.

Rating – 6/10

Have a nice day,
Andy

Wednesday, 7 February 2024

This is Vegan Propaganda by Ed Winters – Book Review

 


Publisher’s write-up:

‘Our choices can help alleviate the most pressing issues we face today: the climate crisis, infectious and chronic diseases, human exploitation and, of course, non-human exploitation. Undeniably, these issues can be uncomfortable to learn about but the benefits of doing so cannot be overstated. It is quite literally a matter of life and death.

Through exploring the major ways that our current system of animal farming affects the world around us, as well as the cultural and psychological factors that drive our behaviours, This Is Vegan Propaganda answers the pressing question, is there a better way?

Whether you are a vegan already or curious to learn more, this book will show you the other side of the story that has been hidden for far too long. Based on years of research and conversations with slaughterhouse workers and farmers, to animal rights philosophers, environmentalists and everyday consumers, vegan educator and public speaker Ed Winters will give you the knowledge to understand the true scale and enormity of the issues at stake.’

This is Vegan Propaganda is a book on the propaganda done by meat industry and the dairy industry over the years, and other common arguments against vegan lifestyle, argued and compiled by the vegan activist Ed Winters.

He starts explaining the environment he grew up in and his transition to veganism. He then goes on to talk about the practices of the meat and dairy industry and why for both moral and scientific reasons, one needs to embrace veganism. He goes on to mention more in graphic detail as to what goes on when it comes to treatment of animals, be it in slaughterhouses or dairy farms. There is also a segment of the book, where he debunks the frequent arguments used by the meat industry and the society at large, including the famous question of ‘how do you get your protein?’, and much as he touches upon the arguments in this book, I understand that he has written a whole book titled How to argue with a meat eater.

The book is very well researched and provides ample statistics (properly referenced to back his claims). One might feel that his statistics are highly UK-centric, but that is natural given that the writer is from there. Moreover, the tendency in our globalised world is similar across, barring a few minor gaps. So, this book tries to please various sides, those who are convinced by statistics or those who are convinced by morals. I found some of the information quite interesting, for instance, on the amount of land occupied by farms of soybeans (a common argument against vegans) and it would only increase if we were to all go vegan; even though, as of today, 80% of the soybeans are for consumption by farm animals who are slaughtered later for their meat.

The aspect I was not sure was whom the author was addressing. Given that I am a vegan, I am not shocked by what the author has written nor are my personal choices put on trial over here. But if the intention is to reach beyond the base, I felt the language used by the author was too strong, at times – there are different schools of thought as to whether that is necessary but, in my opinion, making people guilty of their present-day choices is not going to work. It was particularly hard to read the chapters of the book where he described in detail how different animals are tortured by the meat and dairy industry.

However, this book could certainly help those in transition and as I mentioned earlier, that I am vegan, I am also organiser of a vegan group where I am based, and we read this book for a ‘book club event’. One of the participants remarked that they were already a vegetarian but having read this book, decided to turn fully vegan, giving up on dairy and eggs. However, more testimonies, especially from those who are consuming a meat-based diet as of today, could help me judge this aspect better.

To conclude, I found this book informative and as aforementioned, could help those in transition. However, for those who cannot read detailed write-ups on torture of animals in the ‘factory farms’, those sections could be avoided. Considering that, I would award the book a rating of seven on ten.

Rating – 7/10

Have a nice day,
Andy

Saturday, 3 February 2024

Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake – Book Review

 


Publisher’s write-up:

‘The more we learn about fungi, the less makes sense without them. They can change our minds, heal our bodies and even help us avoid environmental disaster; they are metabolic masters, earth-makers and key players in most of nature's processes. In Entangled Life, Merlin Sheldrake takes us on a mind-altering journey into their spectacular world, and reveals how these extraordinary organisms transform our understanding of our planet and life itself.’

Fungi are ever present – be it in the mushrooms we eat or the moulds that we find in bread or furniture. However, the argument made by the biologist Merlin Sheldrake in his book Entangled Life as to how fungi make our worlds and could even shape the future.

Fungi are in a unique position between the plant and animal kingdoms, and towards the end of the book, the author even evokes the question as to whether it is reasonable to categorise all fungi under one category, which could be inappropriate (akin to how not all animals in the water are ‘fish’). The author starts with the phenomenon of lichens, the symbiosis between an algae and a fungi and how they have eventually helped in taking organisms from sea to the land. Equally, he also talks about intelligence of certain fungi and the networks that they create, which could be as complex as that of the map of the Tokyo underground metro. He also talks about humans’ relationship with fungi, be it consuming mushrooms, using yeast for fermentation or enjoying truffles. The book

The first four chapters were insightful as well as interesting – I learnt a lot of new things about fungi, given there are several words that I saw in this book that I had never used after middle school biology. The book was also well researched, given how the citations and notes were almost as long as the content in itself.

Having said that, I felt that was also a problem of this book, given how I felt that till the fourth chapter, it targeted at a general audience but after that, the level of technical language in this book was significantly elevated that I was no longer able to connect. I was still able to get a broad idea of what the author was trying to express, but could not go into details. Moreover, given that I presume the author wrote it for a general audience than members of his own community of biologists, I would have preferred some amount of writing on the regular mushrooms that we consume en masse over and above the detailed discussions on several fancy fungi that the author had discussed.

To conclude, I would say that this is a book that could be enjoyed a lot by people who have a background in the subject, to the rest, you can get a broad idea of what the author is talking about, but name-dropping several technical terms without much explanation or citing names of scientists without much explanation on what those scientists had done – was difficult to follow (often redirected to research papers in the notes). I came out knowing more about our world having read this book and that could make a case to say that this book was interesting, but at the same time, owing to the writer’s presentation, it also made it boring and a difficult read. On that note, I would award the book a rating of five on ten.

Rating – 5/10

Have a nice day,
Andy

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