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The Deepest Roots: Finding Food and Community on a Pacific Northwest Island (Northwest Writers Fund xx) Hardcover – Illustrated, September 7, 2016
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As friends began "going back to the land" at the same time that a health issue emerged, Kathleen Alcalá set out to reexamine her relationship with food at the most local level. Remembering her parents, Mexican immigrants who grew up during the Depression, and the memory of planting, growing, and harvesting fresh food with them as a child, she decided to explore the history of the Pacific Northwest island she calls home.
In The Deepest Roots, Alcalá walks, wades, picks, pokes, digs, cooks, and cans, getting to know her neighbors on a much deeper level. Wanting to better understand how we once fed ourselves, and acknowledging that there may be a future in which we could need to do so again, she meets those who experienced the Japanese American internment during World War II, and learns the unique histories of the blended Filipino and Native American community, the fishing practices of the descendants of Croatian immigrants, and the Suquamish elder who shares with her the food legacy of the island itself.
Combining memoir, historical records, and a blueprint for sustainability, The Deepest Roots shows us how an island population can mature into responsible food stewards and reminds us that innovation, adaptation, diversity, and common sense will help us make wise decisions about our future. And along the way, we learn how food is intertwined with our present but offers a path to a better understanding of the future.
Watch the book trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFG8MpTo_ZU&feature=youtu.be
- Print length360 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of Washington Press
- Publication dateSeptember 7, 2016
- Dimensions8.6 x 5.8 x 1.2 inches
- ISBN-100295999381
- ISBN-13978-0295999388
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"The issues Alcalá explores are relevant beyond Bainbridge's boundaries, . . . from the meaning of a homeland to the questions of who has power in the modern world and who has responsibility. . . . The stories have the effect of coming to the reader as they came to the writer, raising as many difficult questions as they answer."―Rebekah Denn, Seattle Times
"This unique and fascinating memoir blends the history of Washington with the story of her family's migration from Mexico, highlighted by informed insights on ecology, economy and gastronomy."―Rigoberto González, NBC News Latino
"The Deepest Roots should inspire readers to expend elbow grease in working la tierra and seeking community with like-minded gente for healthier living."―Michael Sedano, La Bloga
"Alcalá takes the local food movement, so long the province of hippy gringos, and brings it home to the immigrant communities for whom it has so long been a fact of life."―Alejandra Oliva, Remezcla
"A layered experience of discovery, moving organically between personal stories, cultural history, and discussions of environmental policy. . . . Bainbridge Island is a perfect microcosm through which to explore the question of local sustainability. . . . It is a pleasant surprise to hear from some Whatcom County locals among Alcalá's interviews."―Lisa Gresham, Cascadia Weekly
"As important now as when it was first published in 2016, Kathleen Alcalá's book The Deepest Roots: Finding Food and Community on a Pacific Northwest Island recently released in paperback, allows the reader to come along as Alcalá explores the food culture of her home, Bainbridge Island, learns more about how to care for her health, and discovers the ways our collective fates are intimately connected."―1889 Washington's Magazine
"The Deepest Roots is a timely and charming book on how place-based foods infuse community by one of the finest writers ever to emerge from the Pacific Northwest."―Gary Paul Nabhan, author of Coming Home to Eat: The Pleasures and Politics of Local Food
"A wildly ambitious book. By focusing on the food in one place, Alcalá is able to pull together cultural and cross-cultural experiences, environmental debates, and, perhaps most crucial for me, issues of economic justice that underpin all food production."―Ana Maria Spagna, author of Reclaimers and Potluck: Community on the Edge of Wilderness
Book Description
Combining memoir, historical records, and a blueprint for sustainability, The Deepest Roots shows us how an island population can mature into responsible food stewards and reminds us that innovation, adaptation, diversity, and common sense will help us make wise decisions about our future.
― University of Washington PressAbout the Author
Kathleen Alcalá is the author of a collection of essays, The Desert Remembers My Name: On Family and Writing; three novels, including Treasures in Heaven; and a collection of short stories. She lives on Bainbridge Island, Washington.
Product details
- Publisher : University of Washington Press; Illustrated edition (September 7, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 360 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0295999381
- ISBN-13 : 978-0295999388
- Item Weight : 1.24 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.6 x 5.8 x 1.2 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,210,057 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #724 in Western U.S. Cooking, Food & Wine
- #4,298 in Culinary Biographies & Memoirs
- #13,010 in Women in History
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Kathleen Alcalá’s life is all about stories. She is the author of four works of fiction – Mrs. Vargas and the Dead Naturalist; Spirits of the Ordinary; The Flower in the Skull; and Treasures in Heaven – and a collection of essays. Her work is the recipient of a Governor’s Writers Award, the Washington State Book Award, a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award, and a Western States Book Award, among others. Kathleen teaches Creative Writing in the Low Residency MFA program at the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts on Whidbey Island. Two of her stories are included in the recent Norton Anthology of Latino Literature. More at www.kathleenalcala.com.
“I began writing as a way to explain the world to myself. So much family history did not match the ‘official’ history of the Southwest, that I had to become an explorer, an adventurer, an ethnographer, a scholar and a writer in order to discover who we were and who we are today. I believe that writing, in and of itself, is a political act, and that the artistic cannot be separated from the political. Writing makes the invisible, visible; the silent, audible; the absent, present.”
Quotes:
This is a book of wonders. Each story unfolds with humor and simplicity and perfect naturalness into something original and totally unpredictable. Not one tale is like another, yet all together they form a beautiful whole, a world where one would like to stay forever. The kingdoms of Borges and Garcia Marquez lie just over the horizon, but this landscape of desert towns and dreaming hearts, of lost sisters and ghost scientists, canary singers and road readers, is Alcalá-land. It lies across the border between the living and the dead, across all the borders – a true new world.
- Ursula K. LeGuin on Mrs. Vargas and the Dead Naturalist
Kathleen Alcalá captures the essence of the magical realism in her work. Her stories convincingly move the reader from one reality to the other. Kathleen’s craft illuminates the souls of her characters: the Mexican women who carry the universe in their hearts.
- Rudolfo Anaya
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You don’t have to know anything about the island to enjoy this book, though I guarantee you will know a lot about it when you’re done. Intimate details that immerse you in the place with all your senses, so that you might start to feel you are one of the neighbors, digging in to a community garden plot to brush the rich soil off of fresh carrots for a potluck dinner. As a wanderer who has connected deeply with the earth but never one particular place on it, I am in awe of this sort of rooting, and even inspired to one day create that for myself. For those of us without our own historical ties to one place or our food, this book provides a map to earning your belonging.
Alcalá’s lyrical writing paints a near romantic view of farming, food, and community, but she digs deeper and examines both the pleasures and the problems of farming and raising great food.
Alcalá draws her reader into the world that she loves. Every burst of joy is real.
The stories that she tells, all true, include the history of Bainbridge Island. From this she writes about what is happening now on the very popular island.
Life in a community is not simple. The issues caused by development, climate change, limited aquifers, zoning, competing uses are made compelling. Water, space, and how we allocate and use these lies at the heart of community discord. These issues reflect differing visions of the future. Disagreement does not mean that a vision is wrong, but the other issues that surround taking one path to the future over another have to be examined. Alcalá deftly does this.
The photographs by Joel Sackett adorn the cover, and are the best. The interior black and white photos, while lacking the vibrancy of Sackett’s eye for color, are full of life and show what Alcalá writes about. The love that people have of each other and what they do comes clearly through.
The resilience of people and the fragility of land come through on every page. This is a book that you will read again and again.






