Description
Book SynopsisArgues that in order to provide nutrient-rich food and fight climate change, we need to move beyond sustainable to regenerative agriculture, a practice that is highly tailored to local environments and renews resources. This book will resonate with anyone concerned about the future of food, providing guidance for creating a better, regenerative agricultural future.
Trade Review"For reasons of public health and in the interest of a healthy planet, our corporate food system badly needs to be repaired. In
One Size Fits None, Stephanie Anderson crisscrosses the country, visiting the intrepid farmers who practice exactly the sort of farming techniques that will serve as models for that needed reform."—Matt Sutherland,
Foreword"Though these recollections have become complicated for Anderson due to her recent research, she writes convincingly that it is possible for her family's farm—and all farms— to find and implement the sustainable practices that will carry them into a better future. Even readers who are not directly involved in food production will come away from this book as more informed consumers, able to make better decisions about purchasing the food that sustains us, and with a much deeper understanding of how agricultural production has changed. And how it will—how it must—change again."—Katrina Gersie-Spronk,
Hopper"It takes an agriculture reporter turned creative writer like Stephanie Anderson to do the legwork of reporting and research to explain how the world of industrial agriculture works. She does so clearly and convincingly, on every page of this book. But she’s not just throwing flames at big ag or careless consumers. She positions herself in the center of the bullseye, as she considers her own family ranch and what she’s come to understand as unsustainable management practices taking place there."—Julianne Couch,
Daily Yonder"As an initial illustration of what regenerative agriculture could and does look like in practice,
One Size Fits None is an invaluable resource, a step in the right direction of imagining alternative way of doing and organizing life around the soil and farming."—John C. Nichols,
Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts"Anderson’s relatable, highly descriptive narrative deftly brings readers into the worlds of the five farmers featured in the book and presents a compelling take on industrial agriculture. Readers, both urban and rural, farm and nonfarm, will come away with a better understanding of how we can move toward changing a destructive system with solutions that are realistic and very attainable.
One Size Fits None is sure to prompt fruitful discussions among reading groups, farm organizations, and students of agriculture."—Jenny Barker-Devine,
Kansas History"This book is a call to bring farming away from abstraction and back into its concrete context as part of unique human and natural ecosystems. . . . I hope it finds readers who will take up its call to find creative ways to farm better."—Nathan Beacom,
Front Porch Republic"
One Size Fits None leaves readers with a hopeful feeling that regenerative agriculture has a rich future in the US if farmers are willing to change and if policymakers support such change."—Abby M. Dubisar,
Great Plains Research “A brave and clear-eyed book by a farmer’s daughter about the problems in our agriculture and the factors that keep farmers from making it better. Stephanie Anderson . . . points the way toward an agriculture that regenerates our soil, our land, and our hopes.”—Kristin Ohlson, author of
The Soil Will Save Us“Stephanie Anderson deftly counterpoints profiles of innovative farmers with affectionate yet honest reflections on her family’s farm—and the compromises the industrial model demands. Anderson is a strong, new voice for an agriculture that works for public health, for nature, and for farmers.”—Judith D. Schwartz, author of
Cows Save the Planet and
Water in Plain Sight“
One Size Fits None should be required reading for anyone who yearns for a clear-headed and informed account of our dysfunctional corporate food system, which also examines hopeful models for reform.”—Andrew Furman, author of
Bitten: My Unexpected Love Affair with Florida and
Goldens Are HereTable of ContentsIntroduction
Part One: Conventional 1. The Vice President
2. The Farm We Grew
3. The Growth of Roth Farms
4. The Farm Town
5. The Muck
Part Two: Holistic Regenerative 6. The Holistic Philosophy
7. The Grass
8. The Buffalo
9. The End of the CAFO
10. The Sun’s Wealth
Part Three: Organic Regenerative 11. The Surfing Farmer
12. The Mission
13. The Plants
14. The Lifestyle
15. The Consumer
16. The Farmer Goes to the Table
17. The Urban Farmer
18. The Agriculturalized City
Part Four: Diversified Regenerative 19. The Diversified Farm
20. The Soil
21. The Abundance of an Acre
22. The Livestock
23. The Alternative to Hay
24. The Restoration of the Native Prairie
25. The Farmers’ Market
26. The Message to Conventional Farmers
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography