Citrus: A History | 
| Author: Pierre Laszlo Publisher: University Of Chicago Press Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $15.01 (60%)
New (30) Used (11) from $8.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 429388
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 262 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1
ISBN: 0226470261 Dewey Decimal Number: 634.304 EAN: 9780226470269 ASIN: 0226470261
Publication Date: November 6, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Walk into your local grocery store and down the produce aisle, and you’ll find a dazzling array of citrus, from navel oranges and clementines to grapefruit and key limes—and sometimes even more exotic fare like the Japanese yuzu or the baboon lemon. Nearly 100 million tons of citrus are produced globally every year, but where did these fruits first come from? How did they find their way into the Western world? And how did they become both a culinary and cultural phenomenon? Pierre Laszlo here traces the spectacular rise and spread of citrus across the globe: from Southeast Asia in 4000 BC through North Africa and the Roman Empire to early modern Spain and Portugal, whose explorers introduced the fruits to the Americas during the 1500s. Blending scientific rigor with personal curiosity, Citrus ransacks over two millennia of world history, exploring the numerous roles that citrus has played in agriculture, horticulture, cooking, nutrition, religion, and art—from the Jewish feast of the Tabernacles through the gardens and courts of Versailles to the canvasses of Vincent van Gogh to the orange groves of southern California and the juicing industry of today. “Laszlo . . . has approached the lore of citrus fruit with the elan of a master chef (the man is French, after all), mixing history, economics, biology and chemistry to produce a book that will bring a smile to readers of every taste.”—Natural History “Altogether charming, eccentric, erudite, and definitely worth the price.”—Times Higher Education Supplement “Stimulating. . . . Laszlo shows that the citrus fruit ‘is a treasure trove of chemicals that are highly useful to humankind’—which also happens to taste wonderful.”—Sunday Times (UK) “A short but brilliant account of 6,000 years of citrus fruits that should be devoured with fervor.”—Financial Times “Did you know there are a billion citrus trees under cultivation, or that grapefruit juice may potentiate the effects of Viagra? Citrus mines over two millennia of history to explore the spread of these fruits out of Asia, their commercialization in the United States, and enduring symbolism the world over.”—New Scientist
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
A grab-bag of snippets padded with personal anecdotes June 9, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
As soon as I had read a few chapters of Citrus, by Pierre Laszlo, I regretted wasting my money on this superficial excuse for history. It gives the impression of having been hastily cut and pasted from the results of a Google search on "citrus".
There is no real connecting narrative. The book is just a disjointed compilation of snippets of information, linked by an irritating, chatty style of writing, and interspersed with self-serving anecdotes from Laszlo's life. It is as much about providing a forum for Laszlo to strut and preen as it is about citrus.
In one place he says "good writing, in like manner to inhaling a fragrance from citrus, extracts from simple words a whiff of an aroma with which to flavour sentences". This is simply under-graduate silliness.
In another place, Laszlo says that Ivrea is "best known as the location of Olivetti's headquarters", then goes on to describe the famous Ivrea "battle of the oranges" for which it is probably far better known.
Laszlo claims that "there is no basic difference in technical sophistication between the manufacture of gasoline . . . and the production of orange juice". This is just a glib one liner that happens to be wrong. I have worked as a chemical engineer in oil refineries and know a little about what is involved.
Much material is marginally relevant to the history of citrus fruits and seems to have been included to bulk out a thin story.
Information is repeated over and over. I got sick of reading variants of the phrase "Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid." No wonder the bored reader suspects that the book is a cut-and-paste job.
Numerous recipes are also included, but they have no historical relevance, nor do they advance any argument in the book, which could easliy be catalogued under Cookery. They are simply there to reinforce some personal anecdote about Laszlo's life and to serve as padding to bulk out the book.
Platitudes and opinions are freely given: "American English and British English differ slightly in vocabulary and spelling". The dominating statue of Christ the Redeemer in Rio is "downright ugly".
There are no footnotes, nor any bibliography, which is unusual in a work claiming to be a history of citrus. There is a 36-page grab-bag of fairly random notes at the end of the book, with a reference to Laszlo's website.
Laszlo's earlier book, "Salt: Grain of Life", was quite readable, so I was disappointed to find "Citrus" to be so poorly written and edited.
The book is trivial and seems to have been cobbled together quickly and at minimal cost. I felt cheated and misled by much of the publicity blurb written about it.
Don't waste your money. Do as Laszlo seems to have done and Google "citrus" instead.
Perhaps I have been a bit unfair on this particular book. Many others in the same genre (the history of familiar things) also suffer from padding and sloppy editing.
The genre has become very popular since Dava Sobel's excellent "Longitude". Authors and publishers now rush books into print on subjects that don't really justify a book, so padding becomes a necessity if readers are not to feel cheated.
I guess that is what really irks me - being taken for a mug who can be exploited by being promised caviar but actually fed pap in the hope that it will not be noticed.
Engaging read for the scientifically inclined April 7, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Professor Laszlo certainly infuses his work with a great deal of enthusiasm. It is an engaging read. There are some places where you might chuckle and others where you might cringe and still others where he does wander off topic a bit (this is why I knocked off a star).
Though not the focus of the book, he does refer to struggles of indigenous people, people of color, displaced groups etc. with respect to citriculture in passing. In doing so he tries to be as objective as possible.
In short, this is an exciting and engaging book for the scientifically inclined. Even if your just curious about these delicious fruits, you'll take away a wealth of knowledge and fun facts.
Fun but Accurate? March 4, 2008 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
I must admit I only made it to page 42 of this book. Citrus is written in the type of light but informative style that I like in "science for the educated layman" genre ("Cod" by Kurlansky being a great example thereof). The author's enthusiasm is infectious, even if he does wander to and fro among his topics bit more than I'd like.
My real complaint: errors. Olives were not brought to Spain by the Arabs nor Cocoa to the New World by the Spaniards/Portuguese. These are not obscure facts. If he's made these glaring mistakes, how can I trust those lesser known (but potentially fascinating facts) he puts forth about citrus? I can't. So I stopped reading. Alas.
Steven Mlodinow
A Real Lemon February 21, 2008 11 out of 12 found this review helpful
Reportedly, the author, a retired chemistry professor, has written more than 200 scientific articles. Such publications are characterized by sharp focus, tight organization and succinctness. Regrettably, all of those qualities are lacking from this book. What purports to be a history is, instead, a kaleidiscopic array of commentaries centering about citrus fruits. At time the relevant subject all but disappears in digressions. Having introduced the orangerie, Laszlo proceeds to describe Versailles at the time of the Sun King, the modern tourists that flock there, and the classical sculptures in the gardens. Only after two pages does he return to the Orangerie itself. Clemantines, he asserts, "are named for Father Clement Rodier who invented (sic!)them. We are then given an account of the monk's life , then learning that "we do not know the part Rodier played in this discovery" [of the clemantine]. Perhaps Laszlo can be forgiven for dwelling on the chemical properties of the citrus although I doubt that the reader needs to know that there are both left-limone and right-limone. For those interested in an overview of these fruits, The Great Citrus Book is a much better choice. It offers a concise history, photos and brief descriptions of a wide variety of citrus, and some interesting recipes that are much more imaginative than those in the Laszlo book.
5 star Citrus lovers book February 18, 2008 1 out of 12 found this review helpful
Living where we do in California we do indeed have a cornucopia of citrus to enjoy. And this book is so wonderful and informative. And we love learning the rich long history of citrus like Minneolas which are a crossing between a tangerine and a grapefruit.
Or the Satsuma which originated in Japan and has a skin bit firmer. Uglis whose name makes me laugh and in some odd way does describe the look of the fruit. And red grapefruits, sweeter then white grapefruits which I eat often as a snack. And how many citrus lovers know that a Pummelo, is the father of the grapefruit? Or the difference between a key lime and a regular lime sold in most grocery stores?
My favorite citrus are clementine, grapefruit, kumquat which are small and delicious, lemon whose juice I use in all kinds of dishes as well as a slice in a glass of water. Green limes which I love in exotic dishes and the green skin I candy. Cannot think of a variety of orange I don't love.
And starting at a young age our kids have loved tangelo's and tangerines. No wonder I love this book.
|
|
|