In The Omnivore’s Dilemma Pollan’s ability to bring in and
seamlessly synthesize such a wide range of professional opinions and
observations across all topics of the book, all while remaining within the
narrative of his ambitious discovery of the American food system. Pollan’s willingness to sample fare
from all sources, without bias, supports his journalistic research into the sources of the American food system by introducing the element of personal
experience.
Brief sections in the book covering the more
scientific matters behind cow health and corn and grass production can be a
slow read for some, yet they lend a credibility to the problems presented and to why
the system is in need of an overhaul.
Pollan exemplifies the importance of grass by bringing in Joel Salatin,
a farmer who raises all his animals on pasture in the most natural and
ethical way possible. After the release of this book I imagine Salatin’s farm was flooded
with avid readers curious to visit the farm in person and understand Pollan’s
writings from a first person perspective.
Salatin is able to build a sustainable circle on his farm,
through animal by-products and such, that is both unheard of and unsupportable
at the massive industrial level with which mainstream American animal products
are produced. Salatan’s genius in
farming technique goes beyond the pasture, as Pollan, speaking through Salatin,
is able to tie in the political arguments associated and in support of living
off the grid. The advantages being
political, economical, environmental and ethical.
Following an in-depth look at both the industrial and
community based food systems fighting for a place in the American stomach,
Pollan attempts to construct a meal entirely from food he independently
gathered, grew, foraged or hunted.
Under the guidance of knowledgeable, food enthusiasts Pollan experiences
each of these forms of acquirement before completing his experience, and novel,
with a final meal cooked by him for friends and family. Pollan’s ability to quietly excerpt his
opinion through fact and personal experience, while allowing the reader to form
an independent opinion, is the magic behind Pollan’s brilliantly laced together
chain outlining a very broken American food system.