Discussion Questions
1. What was your perception of America's food industry prior to reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle? What did you learn from this book? How has it altered your views on the way food is acquired and consumed?
2. In what ways, if any, have you changed your eating habits since reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle? Depending
on where you live—in an urban, suburban, or rural environment—what
other steps would you like to take to modify your lifestyle with regard
to eating local?
3. "It had felt arbitrary when we sat around the table with our
shopping list, making our rules. It felt almost silly to us in fact, as
it may now seem to you. Why impose restrictions on ourselves? Who
cares?" asks Kingsolver in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle? Did
you, in fact, care about Kingsolver's story and find it to be
compelling? Why or why not? What was the family's aim for their
year-long initiative, and did they accomplish that goal?
4. The writing of Animal, Vegetable, Miracle was a family
affair, with Kingsolver's husband, Steven L. Hopp, contributing factual
sidebars and her daughter, Camille Kingsolver, serving up commentary and
recipes. Did you find that these additional elements enhanced the book?
How so? What facts or statistics in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
surprised you the most?
5. How does each member of the Kingsolver-Hopp family contribute
during their year-long eating adventure? Were you surprised that the
author's children not only participated in the endeavor but that they
did so with such enthusiasm? Why or why not?
6. "A majority of North Americans do understand, at some level, that
our food choices are politically charged," says Kingsolver, "affecting
arenas from rural culture to international oil cartels and global
climate change." How do politics affect America's food production and
consumption? What global ramifications are there for the food choices we
make?
7. Kingsolver advocates the pleasures of seasonal eating, but she
acknowledges that many people would view this as deprivation "because
we've grown accustomed to the botanically outrageous condition of having
everything always." Do you believe that American society can—or will—
overcome the need for instant gratification in order to be able to eat
seasonally? How does Kingsolver present this aspect in Animal,
Vegetable, Miracle? Did you get the sense that she and her family ever
felt deprived in their eating options?
8. Kingsolver points out that eating what we want, when we want comes
"at a price." The cost, she says, "is not measured in money, but in
untallied debts that will be paid by our children in the currency of
extinctions, economic unravelings, and global climate change." What
responsibility do we bear for keeping the environment safe for future
generations? How does eating locally factor in to this?
9. Kingsolver asserts that "we have dealt to today's kids the
statistical hand of a shorter life expectancy than their parents, which
would be us, the ones taking care of them." How is our "thrown-away food
culture" a detriment to children's health? She also says, "We're
raising our children on the definition of promiscuity if we feed them a
casual, indiscriminate mingling of foods from every season plucked from
the supermarket." What responsibility do parents have to teach their
children about the value and necessity of a local food culture?
10. In what ways do Kingsolver's descriptions of the places she
visited on her travels—Italy, New England, Montreal, and Ohio—enhance
her portrayal of local and seasonal eating?
11. "Marketing jingles from every angle lure patrons to turn our
backs on our locally owned stores, restaurants, and farms," says
Kingsolver. "And nobody considers that unpatriotic." How much of a role
do the media play in determining what Americans eat? Discuss the decline
of America's diversified family farms, and what it means for the
country as a whole.
(Questions issued by publisher.)
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