MOFGA’s Blog
Stay in tune with MOFGA's community!
MOFGA’s blog is a place to learn about community events, read the latest book and film reviews and more!
Book Review: “What If We Get It Right?”
“What If We Get It Right? Visions of Climate Futures” by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson is the most comprehensive, pragmatic, and uplifting piece of climate and environmental literature written in the last decade, if not ever! It is a book that stands with environmental calls to action like Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” and Aldo Leopold’s “A Sand
Book Review: “The Modern Herbal Dispensatory”
“The Modern Herbal Dispensatory” by Thomas Easley and Steven Horne is a practical and accessible guide to herbal medicine-making, uniquely bridging traditional herbal knowledge with modern scientific understanding. It stands out as both a reference manual and a hands-on workbook for home herbalists, students, and practitioners alike. The book has two parts that complement each other
Book Review: “The Edible Flower”
Part cookbook, part garden guide, “The Edible Flower” has everything you need to get started growing — and eating — flowers. Authors Erin Bunting, a chef, and organic gardener Jo Facer have been serving garden-to-table meals at their smallholding in Ireland. Most people think of flowers as decorative additions to a dish, but the truth
Book Review: “Forest Euphoria”
Like any scientist, mycologist Patricia Ononiwu Kaishian is no stranger to closely examining the world around her. From the Laboulbeniales — multicellular fungi that live on the surface of beetles — that she has made a career of studying, to the copperheads whose company she sought out as a child, Kaishian applies a unique lens
Book Review: “Unrooted”
Erin Zimmerman’s “Unrooted: Botany, Motherhood, and the Fight to Save an Old Science” is a compelling memoir that intertwines her passion for plants with the challenges she faced as a woman in science. Dispersed through the book are botanical illustrations by Zimmerman, and quotes by other scientists begin each chapter. The book is one plant
Book Review: “No Meat Required”
“I have come to understand eating with the planet and animals in mind as a practice rather than a strict set of rules that must be followed to the letter at all times, no matter one’s circumstances or geography,” writes Alicia Kennedy in “No Meat Required: The Cultural History & Culinary Future of Plant-Based Eating.”
Book Review: “Leaning Toward Light”
If you’re looking for company and inspiration throughout the gardening season — from planting to wintering and in between — you might enjoy the lovely anthology “Leaning Toward Light: Poems for gardens & the hands that tend them.” This book of poems takes us through cyclical gardening seasons. Each of these seasons, from “Weeding &
Book Review: “Country Queers”
“ …what it means for me to be a country queer, is that you can’t leave your folk at the door. You can’t act like you grew up with people that weren’t like the people that are acting all kinds of crazy in all kinds of ways.” – Elandria Williams “Country Queers: A Love Letter”
Book Review: “The Problem with Solutions”
AgFunder is a venture capital firm that invests broadly in technology, agriculture, and food. I admit that as an organic farmer and homesteader it’s a little strange that I subscribe to their newsletter. The companies highlighted by AgFunder are bathed in the Silicon Valley ideology of techno-utopianism with a strange idea of what dinner might