A clear eyed and unsentimental look at how farming has become relentlessly optimized by automation, markets and politics; factors that don't always take into account the guy who's actually driving the tractor. -- New York Times Book Review
This Blessed Earth is a sort of universal story of family farmers and all they're up against in their efforts to take care of the land and make a living from it. It's also a crash course in the history that brought us to this place of corporate power, shrinking resources, and a changing climate. But it plants seeds of hope as the next generation prepares to inherit the family land and all the joys and challenges that come with it. This book is an invitation to all who care about family farmers-which after all is all of us, since we all eat! -- Willie Nelson, founder and president of Farm Aid
It's not fair to claim that you are concerned about the country's food system unless you truly understand the millions of unsung conventional family farmers who produce our corn, soybeans, and beef. Genoways portrays just such a family in a book that is factual, rich in history, and filled with characters you will come to know as friends. He writes with an investigative journalist's mind and a poet's soul. -- Barry Estabrook, author of Tomatoland and Pig Tales
Ted Genoways brings a lifetime of knowledge to the complex story of modern agriculture. His depth of understanding is evident on every page as he follows the Hammonds through a year on their Nebraska farm, examining the way they are not only at the behest of traditional challenges such as weather and time but also subject to international trade agreements, worldwide competition, and the challenges of scale. In This Blessed Earth, Genoways masterfully illustrates the costs and demands of such a life, and beautifully renders the endurance and dignity of those who have chosen it. -- Jane Brox, author of Clearing Land
Everyone who eats in America should read this lyrical and often heartbreaking book about life on a modern American farm. It will change the way you look at what is on your plate. -- Ruth Reichl, New York Times best-selling author of My Kitchen Year
Farming, family, and food all come together in this beautifully written story of what it takes to work this blessed earth. -- Tom Colicchio, chef and co-founder of Food Policy Action
In an impressive and compelling work of literary journalism, Ted Genoways dives deep into the heart of an American farm family, illuminating critical issues troubling our complex food production system. But he also describes in intimate detail the very human struggles of the work-between husband and wife, parent and child, father-in-law and son-in-law-in one family committed to growing our food and passing the work on to the next generation. -- Michael Ruhlman, author of Grocery: The Buying and Selling of Food in America
Genoways writes of the environmental damage wrought by pesticides and overwatering, the risks of genetically modified seed, and the harm of flooding global grain markets with cheap corn. American farming frequently receives tough criticism on these points. The beauty of This Blessed Earth is to understand them from a grower's perspective. -- Outside
This Blessed Earth is both a concise exploration of the history of the American small farm and a vivid, nuanced portrait of one family's fight to preserve their legacy and the life they love. -- Smithsonian
The Blessed Earth is a history book, an economics text, even a soap opera of sorts. If we eat, we should know. -- Kim Ode - Star Tribune
Insightful and empathetic....In his compelling narrative, journalist Genoways gives the reader a kitchen-table view of the vagaries, complexities and frustrations of modern farming. -- Elfrieda Abbe - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
A remarkable portrait of families in far flung fields, completely plugged in to the world. -- Tom Ashbrook - WBUR On Point
With genuine honesty and historical awareness...Genoways delivers a close-up look at what farmers face today and their efforts to accomplish their goals. -- Bookpage
Timely....This Blessed Earth is a concise look at the history of the American farm and a heartfelt portrait of one family's struggle to maintain their way of life. -- The Missourian