The bananas we eat today aren't your parents' bananas: We eat a
recognizable, consistent breakfast fruit that was standardized in the
1960s from dozens into one basic banana. But because of that, the banana
we love is dangerously susceptible to a pathogen that might wipe them
out.
That's the story of our food today: Modern science has brought us
produce in perpetual abundance once-rare fruits are seemingly never out
of season, and we breed and clone the hardiest, best-tasting varieties
of the crops we rely on most. As a result, a smaller proportion of
people on earth go hungry today than at any other moment in the last
thousand years, and the streamlining of our food supply guarantees that
the food we buy, from bananas to coffee to wheat, tastes the same every
single time. Our corporate food system has nearly perfected the process
of turning sunlight, water and nutrients into food.
But our crops themselves remain susceptible to the nature's fury. And
nature always wins. Authoritative, urgent, and filled with fascinating
heroes and villains from around the world, Never Out of Season is the
story of the crops we depend on most and the scientists racing to
preserve the diversity of life, in order to save our food supply, and
us.