Review: Exodus from Hunger
Originally posted at Gathering Voices: Faith Conversations from TheThoughtfulChristian.com
It seems to be in the headlines every week in Minnesota — “Homelessness Numbers Rise,” “Food Pantries Struggle to Keep up With Demand,” “Income Gap Widens” — our world, and our nation, is hungry. I know this. But, at the same time, the problem is so overwhelming and wide-reaching that it paralyzes me.
When I consider hunger in America, I think back to a youth group activity many years ago for which we were split into different small groups. Each group was to buy and then make an evening meal. The catch: we had a day’s worth of food stamps from which to do it (or something like that, at least). So we went out to the store and found, very quickly, how difficult it is to live on food stamps alone. Nobody went home from that youth group session very full, but we learned a lesson.
Similarly, a few years ago the Michigan and Oregon governors lived for a time on the equivalent to their state’s food stamp aid. In Minnesota, there’s currently a debate raging about whether residents on public assistance should be able to access more then $20 in cash each month.
With this background in mind, I read David Beckmann’s Exodus from Hunger: We Are Called to Change the Politics of Hunger. It’s a good book, helping put the hunger fight in context, both in the U.S and beyond. Beckmann has made a career out of this struggle, and I most appreciated his perspective as a person of faith. The premise of the book is summed up in this word from the introduction:
I’m convinced that the binding constraint [for hunger reduction] is political will, and that stronger leadership from the U.S. government is crucial. I’m also convinced that God is present in this struggle, and that people of faith and conscience should do our part, partly by changing U.S. politics on hunger and poverty issues.
Please don’t put this book down without deciding to do something to help build a stronger political constituency for U.S. policies to provide help and opportunity for hungry and poor people.
Beckmann serves as president of Bread for the World, “a collective Christian voice urging our nation’s leaders to end hunger in our country and the world.” The book is sort of an overview of Bread for the World’s mission, an extended explanation of our current crisis and a work of passionate hope for how we might address it politically.
The book is in three parts. Part one addresses the present crisis with helpful charts and more personal vignettes. Part two hits the faith angle, arguing that caring for the hungry is both a Biblical mandate and would be a boon to America. The third part is a rallying cry for forward movement.
Perhaps my favorite quote from the work comes from British Prime Minister, David Cameron: “Poverty is not acceptable in our country today. Not when we have people who earn more in a lunchtime than millions will earn in a lifetime, not when we understand so clearly how wealth is created and poverty eradicated.” I also especially appreciated Beckmann’s close connection of our call to eradicate hunger as a call from God.
Most of my experience with Bread for the World (beside hanging out with a friend who works there) is participating in their letter writing campaigns to elected officials, what they call “An Offering of Letters.” I’ve also used them to follow hunger-related legislation through the legislative process. I definitely have some friends who scoff at these letter writing campaigns, so let me be clear (and also remind myself): it’s a false choice between either writing legislators and volunteering at food pantries, and it’s most certainly the case that legislators listen to careful cries for hunger-related justice.
So, if you’re feeling overwhelmed with hunger and poverty headlines, or if you just wish to understand the situation surrounding the politics of hunger more clearly, pick up a copy of Exodus from Hunger and feed your soul.
See also: A Study Guide on Exodus from Hunger (written, in fact, by a good friend of mine).
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Exodus from Hunger
By David Beckmann
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Review: Hudson's "The Bones of Plenty"
Rarely, a good book puts me in the reader’s bind: it’s so good I want to savor every page, so I end up reading it very slowly, over several weeks. The Bones of Plenty by Lois Phillips Hudson, published in 1963, was one of those rare reads.
A few weeks ago, a friend who grew up in North Dakota sent me some book recommendations after he learned I moved to the region. The Bones of Plenty made the list, and I’m so glad.

The story chronicles the plight of a family of farmers near Jamestown in the 1930s. My depression era history is pretty weak, so the novel gave me some significant historical awareness. What I enjoyed most, however, was the depth of Hudson’s main character: George Custer, a farmer trying to get by despite drought and disease, his father-in-law’s close watch, and a less-than-kind landlord. Custer’s personality — both overly optimistic and antagonistic — only makes his character more believable and pitiful. The way Custer treats his wife Rachel also tags a so sad but so true hyper-masculinity. Furthermore, his disdain for his daughter being a girl (and not being able to take over the farm) is utterly heartbreaking.
The same thought had crossed my mind, so I wasn’t surprised that several online reviews compared Bones of Plenty to Grapes of Wrath. Hudson isn’t quite Steinbeck, but Bones has that same grasping unrelenting quality, the same humanity vs. the powers that makes Grapes of Wrath so amazing.
So, if you’re up for a novel to savor, pick up the Dakotan Grapes of Wrath: The Bones of Plenty.
Book Review: McKibben's "Deep Economy"
In Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future, Bill McKibben writes,
“I would be content if this book helped shake our ingrained belief that growth is still an obvious necessary goal our our economy–content if the reader wondered a little the next time he or she heard some newscaster happily declare that the economy had gotten 3% percent larger. And content, as well, if my work helped shake the idea that there was no alternative to growth save miserable recession.”
Well, McKibben should be content, then, as his book did that and more for this reader.
McKibben has written for The New Yorker, and is the author of, among others, Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age, The End of Nature, and The Comforting Whirlwind: God, Job, and the Scale of Creation.

I found Deep Economy a great read, as it both did well to name some of the ridiculousness of our current consumer culture, and provided glimpses into other better ways.
The book is broken into five sections. The first, “After Growth” chronicles how the economy and society changed after the invention of the steam engine. This section includes a discussion on both the environmental impact of growth — basically, bad — and the sociological impact — not quite as good as we’d like to think.
I’ll let you guess what section two is about, “The Year of Eating Locally,” but it does have a more hopeful feel because a) it’s nearly possible to eat completely locally in many parts of the US and b) buying and eating local is a fast-growing trend.
The third section, “All for One, or One for All” investigates America’s passion for individualism through many different lenses, making the — almost Christian — argument for a new way to vision community.
Fourthly, in “The Wealthy of Communities” McKibben takes the reader deeper into such communities of mutual support and local-mindset who have a different idea of progress than just that of one where the individual prospers.
Finally, “The Durable Future” anticipates the positive places such a philosophy could take a culture. McKibben’s vision isn’t quite rosy, but I appreciated that it’s not as dour as some environmentalists.
Though sometimes a bit plodding with statistics and stories, I found Deep Economy to be a fair, though troubling assessment of where our consumer culture has taken us. At many points I appreciated how easily his prose and perspective could be adapted in Christian circles. I can only hope that more will heed McKibben’s words and begin to make choices, buy products, and sustain relationships that make our economy not just deeper, but richer too.
Review: "Pure" by Terra Elan McVoy
Pure, Terra Elan McVoy, (Simon Pulse, Hardcover, 9781416978725, 336pp). Find it on IndieBound here, Amazon here, or better yet, high tail over to your indie book store.
Ok, so I have to admit I felt a little strange reading this book in public. I’m all for pink, but the cover does scream, “young adult girl.” In actual fact, though, I’d recommend this novel to any person interested in the challenges of being a young high school American girl, especially if you’re concerned with the moral questions related to purity rings.
Written in the remarkable voice of a high schooler, Terra Elan McVoy explores the depths of a group of close friends who pledge themselves at church not to have sex until marriage. They mark this pledge with purity rings and all is hunky dory until one of the friends admits she and her boyfriend have broken the pledge — and she’s not even particularly remorseful. After all, they’re in love!
So the girls have to decide what do do about the pledge-breaker, what the Bible really says, and how to cope when the true horror happens — her parents find out.
I get the impression that many young adult books tell the stories of girls and their high school antics without having much at all to do with real life these days. McVoy’s characters, though, have after school jobs and homework and cell phone restrictions. These real students deal with the real challenge brought on by a certain type of Christian movement, the black and white, false ease and clarity of purity rings.
So, if you work with high school youth, read this book. If you have high school children, read this book. If you’re in high school yourself, I totally recommend it even more.
And, I have to admit, it feels extra special to be able to give this book a ringing endorsement because I happen to know the author quite well. Terra Elan McVoy is a former babysitter of mine, a fellow First Pres Tallahassee member, and, now, a good friend and the manager of my favorite independent book store, Little Shop of Stories in Decatur. She’s purely good. Read it.
Oh, almost forgot: check out Terra’s website as well.
Book Review (or rave, really): Sherman Alexie's "Ten Little Indians"
Sherman Alexie is an amazing writer. Read his books. I just finished my first of his, Ten Little Indians, a collections of short stories, and it was probably my most enjoyable read since East of Eden.
Alexie’s prose is eerily simple. His language is direct and careful without being conspicuous, and it’s completely
without glamor. Alexie lets the stories speak for themselves — and speak they do.
A brilliant aspiring Native American politician sees his career ruined after a racist remark on a basketball court. A young writer journeys to meet the only published poet of her tribe, but finds he’s not what she expected. A couple’s perfect love is split in two by an easy lie, and worked back together over a messy lifetime. A nobody’s grief over his parent’s death finds its life (and death) on the basketball court.
At times, reading these stories I really did laugh out loud. In others, I feared to turn the page on account of sadness.
Perhaps my favorite, “Do You Know Where I Am?” would work as a story to begin pre-marital counseling. It’s a tough tale, a graphic tale in some places –Alexie is clearly not writing for prim and proper Presbyterians– but, in twenty pages, it gets at the challenges and joys, harsh realities and bubbling emotions of a lasting relationship in remarkable ways. Its a story about trust, love, sex, brutality, forgiveness, families, and identity all at the same time. Every couple should read it and discuss it before getting married.
Clearly, I love this guy. Anyone else read him much? If not, order a copy of Ten Little Indians immediately, and I’ll post on more when I read it.
Review: "The Omnivore's Dilemma" by Michael Pollan
Rare is the book that educates, enthralls, convicts, and changes the reader as does The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals by Michael Pollan [The Penguin Press, 2006, 450 pp.] Put simply: it’s a darn good book. To simplify Pollan’s subject, however, is to disregard his entire project: delving into the utter complexity of our relationship with food.
In three main sections, Pollan, now a journalism professor, tells the story behind four particular meals he eats. In order, these meals are a McDonald’s fast-food dinner consumed (in American style) while driving a convertible down the highway, an “organic” home-cooked meal supplied by Whole Foods, an uber-local meal made up of ingredients from a remarkably sustainable farm in Virginia, and a meal consisting almost entirely of foraged or hunted foods gathered near Pollan’s house in northern California. However, the descriptions of the meals themselves, though nice enough, are not the meat of the book. Instead, it is the backstory, the fascinating truths of the food systems that provide these meals, that is the book’s greatest strength. As Pollan puts it early on, the question of “What should we eat” cannot be addressed without also asking, “What am I eating?” and “Where in the world does it come from?” In 450 pages, Pollan begins an answer.
We could all guess the McDonald’s meal is rather unhealthy and totally unsustainable, but what I didn’t know before reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma is to what extent these products–and our food systems in general–are based on corn. Indeed, of the McDonald’s meal Pollan posits, “if you include the corn in the gas tank…the amount of corn that went into producing our movable fast-food feast would easily have overflowed the car’s truck, spilling a trail of golden kernels on the blacktop behind us.” The book is built upon Pollan’s brilliant description of the industrial nature of America’s food system, almost all of which is predicated on cheap ubiquitous inedible corn.
As fascinating as the discussion of corn truly was–did you know that 60% of our corn stock goes to feeding livestock, that a typical family farm can feed the equivalent of 129 people, that a typical box of breakfast cereal is four cents of commodity corn processed and sold for four dollars–even more interesting is Pollan’s description of the rise of the organic movement originally intended to supply Americans with local, healthy, sustainable products but which now, largely, has been co-opted by the American industrial empire. Tracing some organic Whole Foods products back to their source and interviewing the organic farmers–“organic” at least, according to the USDA–Pollan describes the possible health benefits of some organic foods with the broader question of sustainability and scale in mind. Pollan does well to carry out this daunting task with an informative rather than preachy tone. He comes across as a storyteller, a relayer of complicated and daunting facts, who largely lets the reader judge the best response to his work. As the title suggests, how to proceed morally, ethically, is a dilemma, one which he describes rather than prescribes.
Another section of the book “Pastoral: Grass” consists, in large part, of a description of how grasses are used (or not used) in farming. Specifically, Pollan recounts in engrossing detail, his week-long visit to Polyface Farm, a remarkably sustainable farm in Virginia. Though the farm produces a significant amount of produce (chicken, beef, eggs, rabbits, etc.) Farmer Joel a self-described “Christian-conservative-libertarian-environmentalist-lunatic,” primarily understands himself as a “grass farmer” since grass–its diversity and health–is the key to his sustainable farm. Alternating between riffs on Polyface’s history, the complexity of grass, and the how-to of sustainable farming, Pollan closes the section with comments from Farmer Joel’s loyal customers, some of whom drive for hours to purchase the “chicken that tastes more like chicken” from a farmer they know and trust. Pollan even gets to work on a mini chicken processing assembly line beside Farmer Joel, his trusty interns, and a few helpful neighbors. The journal of Pollan’s week at Polyface would have been enough to make the book a fascinating read, but how he subsequently describes the larger questions of sustainability, local agriculture, and “the non bar-code people” makes his time at the farm a fruitful field-trip indeed.
Finally, in “Pastoral: The Forest” Pollan squeezes in ruminations on the ethics of vegetarianism, vegan lifestyle, several stories of hunting and foraging expeditions, and a detailed description of a gourmet and almost completely foraged meal. This last supper with characters from Pollan’s northern California foraging pursuits is noteworthy, perhaps, but a slightly disappointing end for such a riveting read. Pollan is so careful not to instruct the reader how to eat that he can become overly discursive about his four meals. This is the book’s conceit, I suppose, one that leaves me questioning, but which is perhaps exactly as Pollan’s hopes.
Pollan is so careful–perhaps, too careful–to invite the reader to process the omnivore’s dilemma oneself. I would have welcomed an occasional barb at the industrial food industry or lapsed organic hippies or even a faint suggestion of Pollan’s view of an ethical way forward. That said, one cannot truly invest in the process of reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma without beginning to mull over the bitter dilemma oneself. And maybe this is Pollan’s goal. As Pollan quotes Wendell Berry, “We are what we eat eats.” This realization raises more questions than it answers, but they are worthwhile questions on which to chew.






