- Published: 12 October 2021
- ISBN: 9780593556986
- Imprint: RH US Audio Adult
- Format: Audio Download
- RRP: $23.00
Seed Money
Monsanto's Past and Our Food Future
- Published: 12 October 2021
- ISBN: 9780593556986
- Imprint: RH US Audio Adult
- Format: Audio Download
- RRP: $23.00
"If you want to know just how Monsanto became so reviled by the sustainable food movement, this gripping tale of greed and corporate power tells all." - Mark Bittman, author of Animal, Vegetable, Junk
"A timely, powerful, and totally engrossing book. Through stories of farmers, chemists, entrepreneurs, workers, patients, lawyers, and judges, Elmore recounts a devastating history of how chemicals have seeped into almost every cranny of the national and global food supply. We will not fix our health until we fix our food; fixing our food, as this book makes clear, is a tale of politics and power." - Anne-Marie Slaughter, CEO, New America
"Seed Money illustrates the danger of placing profit over people and how not protecting our environment from dangerous chemicals threatens the health and welfare of all of us." - Catherine Colman Flowers, founder, Center for Rural Enterprise and Environmental Justice
"I expect this will become the book on Monsanto." - Edmund Russell, President, American Society for Environmental History
"A book of immediate relevance and enduring significance. Elmore’s powerful narrative uncovers evidence long hidden in corporate vaults, reveals the global consequences of decisions made in distant laboratories and boardrooms, and finds connections among science, agriculture, technology, politics, and business never seen before. This is history that matters." - Edward L. Ayers, recipient of the National Humanities Medal
"A fast-paced and vivid account of the global threats to food production and public health from the agrochemical industry’s widely marketed herbicides—a must read for all who wish to better understand the workings of ‘scavenger capitalism.’" - Ellen Griffith Spears, author of Baptized in PCBs: Race, Pollution, and Justice in an All-American Town