| Author/Contributor(s): | Stoll, Steven |
| Publisher: | University of California Press |
| Date: | 11/01/1998 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Condition: | NEW |
Stoll shows how California growers assembled chemicals, corporations, and political influence to bring the most perishable products from the most distant state to the great urban markets of North America. But what began as a compromise between a beneficent environment and intensive cultivation ultimately became threatening to the soil and exploitative of the people who worked it.
Invoking history, economics, sociology, agriculture, and environmental studies, Stoll traces the often tragic repercussions of fruit farming and shows how central this story is to the development of the industrial countryside in the twentieth century.