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Hardcover Coffee: A Dark History Book

ISBN: 0393060713

ISBN13: 9780393060713

Coffee: A Dark History

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$8.49
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Book Overview

Presents a history of coffee, describing its origins in fifteenth-century East Africa, its rise as an imperial consumer product, and the current economic plight of today's coffee-producing countries.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Fascinating blend of History, Myth, and Speculation

This is at my local coffee shop and I read some of it everytime I have coffee. Overall, it is fascinating and well written. Wonderful to know more about my dailey brew.

A spider shouldn't drink it

Antony Wild's (2004) book is The Good Tea and Coffee Company book of the month for January 2007. At the outset, it claims to be a 'dark' history and it certainly doesn't disappoint in that respect. Though sounding a little extravagant in portraying coffee as the 'forbidden fruit' in the Garden of Eden of the Old Testament, each chapter touches on sensitive ethical issues which are moving ever higher on the priority list of European consumers. Tracing the origins of the cultivation of coffee back to the Yemen and the early attempts to create plantations elsewhere by The East India Company, we are taken on a journey of unexpected complexity as coffee finds its way into the social and religeous infrastracture of every continent it touches. By the end of the book, we've had a lot more for our money than simply history. Antony Wild makes us look anew at something we have grown up with and almost taken for granted. He gives us the tools we need to think again about coffee - to bring it out of the darkness.. and into the light.

Wild delivers a strong brew to the US

This is my first introduction to anything about coffee's history and how coffee affects the global market and economy. I am simply a person who likes my morning joe and an occasional coffee house treat! I found the history part of this book fascinating. However, was taken a-back by Wild's strong anti-US feelings about the USA's treatment of Central and South American countries. His treatment seems biased--still, the reader needs to remember that he's a Brit living in France. Overall, a good read.
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