Gristle

From Factory Farms to Food Safety

Edited by Moby and Miyun Park with contributing author Frances Moore Lappé & Anna Blythe Lappé Buy Now

WHERE'S THE BEEF? In the news, that’s where. More than ever, meat is making the headlines and growing numbers of people are becoming more informed and passionate about what they eat. The facts are compelling: contamination cases are on the rise, obesity has become pandemic in the United States, and the animal agriculture sector is responsible for more human-induced greenhouse gas emissions than the entire transportation sector. It’s no wonder that millions of people are thinking twice about meat.

An information-packed, lively, and informative little guide, Gristle is for the growing number of people—from omnivores to vegans—who are thinking twice about the consequences of our industrial factory-farming system of raising animals for food. Multi-platinum musician Moby and leading food policy activist and expert Miyun Park have brought together fifteen of the country's leading voices on this issue—an eclectic group from such diverse backgrounds as farming, workers' rights activism, professional athletics, science, environmental sustainability, food business, and animal welfare advocacy—who together eloquently lay out how and why industrial animal agriculture unnecessarily harms workers, communities, the environment, our health, our wallets, and animals.

In the tradition of Michael Pollan’s The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Gristle combines hard-hitting facts with a light touch and includes fascinating charts and illustrations depicting the stark realities of America’s industrial food system.

ISBN 9781595581914

Responses to Gristle

A collection of compelling, well-researched essays that illuminate and enhance the dialogue on food consumption in America most recently carried forth by Michael Pollan's The Omnivore's Dilemma and the documentary film Food, Inc."

—Publishers Weekly Online

Table of Contents

Introduction – Moby

Chapter 1: Health – Brendan Brazier
Chapter 2: Environment – Lauren Bush
Chapter 3: Taxpayers – John Mackey
Chapter 4: Animals – Wayne Pacelle
Chapter 5: Climate Change – Danielle Nierenberg and Meredith Niles
Chapter 6: Children’s Health – Sara Kubersky and Tom O’Hagan
Chapter 7: Workers – Christine Chavez and Julie Chavez Rodriguez
Chapter 8: Communities – Paul and Phyllis Willis
Chapter 9: Zoonotic Diseases – Michael Greger, M.D.
Chapter 10: Global Hunger – Frances Moore Lappé and Anna Lappé

Epilogue – Miyun Park