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Mushroom Hunters, The MP3 CD – Unabridged, April 8, 2014
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- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBrilliance Audio
- Publication dateApril 8, 2014
- Dimensions6.5 x 0.63 x 5.5 inches
- ISBN-101491518936
- ISBN-13978-1491518939
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Product details
- Publisher : Brilliance Audio; Unabridged edition (April 8, 2014)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 1491518936
- ISBN-13 : 978-1491518939
- Item Weight : 2.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 0.63 x 5.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,944,358 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,003 in Mushrooms in Biological Sciences
- #4,635 in Natural Food Cooking
- #6,863 in Food Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I write about people who live at the intersection of food and nature. This gives me a chance to follow multiple threads that intrigue me: wild foods, foraging, natural history, environmental politics, outdoor sports, adventure travel, etc. My wife thinks it's all a racket--an excuse to bushwhack around the woods and waterways by day and put away obscene amounts of rich food and wine by night. I can't exactly argue with that view.
Really, though, my interest lies in the characters who feel equally at home in both field and kitchen. In my first book, "Fat of the Land: Adventures of a 21st Century Forager," I go spearfishing for lingcod with a modern hunter-gatherer/English PhD; I hunt morel mushrooms with an Italian-American EPA administrator; and jig for squid on a city pier jammed with immigrants hooting and hollering in a dozen different tongues. Bottom line: Foraging is fun, reconnecting us to both the landscape and our fellow humans. Plus, a really good meal awaits. Each chapter concludes with a recipe.
My second book, "The Mushroom Hunters: On the Trail of an Underground America," is about the men and women--many of them immigrants from war-torn countries, migrant workers, or refugees from the Old Economy--who bring wild mushrooms to market. To write the book, I embedded myself in the itinerant subculture of wild mushroom harvesters, a mostly hidden confederacy of treasure-seekers that follows the "mushroom trail" year-round, picking and selling the fungi that land on exclusive restaurant plates around the country. The book takes place over the course of several mushroom seasons and follows the triumphs and failures of a few characters, including an ex-logger trying to pay his bills and stay out of trouble; a restaurant cook turned mushroom broker trying to build a business; and a celebrated chef who picks wild mushrooms on the side to keep in touch with the land. "The Mushroom Hunters" was awarded a 2014 Pacific Northwest Book Award.
My third and newest book is titled "Upstream: Searching for Wild Salmon, from River to Table." In many ways, salmon are the last great wild food. In North America entire societies were organized around the salmon lifecycle--a few still exist. To write the book, I traveled throughout "salmon country," from California to Alaska and inland to Idaho. I spent time with tribal fishermen, commercial fishermen, sport anglers, scientists, environmentalists, fishmongers, chefs, and others. Their stories reveal the importance of salmon both as a keystone species and as a cultural totem. More to the point, the fate of salmon is largely tied to our own fate.
What else? I've worked as a reporter, editor, and writer my entire career, for both Old and New Media. I took the plunge into full-time writing after a year spent living in a cabin off the grid with my wife and son. (I emerged from the woods with a book idea and a new daughter.) I live in Seattle with my family, where I teach foraging and cooking classes, write a regular column for Seattle Magazine, and contribute articles and essays to a variety of other print/web media.
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Cook explains the difficulty in getting inside this close to the ground community, but explains his choice to see the mushroom hunters through an atypical example as a necessary one due to the semi legal nature of the business.
The story told, that of an exceptional mushroom hunter/buyer named Faber gives us much information about the ways mushrooms get to our tables, from their semi legal picking by foragers, to their use in restaurants.
I now have a better idea how to cook with and value mushrooms, but the story is really carried by its individual protagonist, Faber, and his challenging, hard working life, rather than the lives of the majority of mushroom pickers without his access to the top of the food chain.
This focus may have been what leads to an abrupt end focusing on a closing of part of Faber's life, rather than a drawing together of the various elements that effect mushroom hunters generally.
I enjoyed the book and its information about life in the wild, mushrooms, and some of those who pick them. Just remember it's more of a year in the life of a mushroom picker, rather than the story of the workers in a fascinating, under table, cottage industry.
Finally, an observation which is not really a criticism. The Mushroom Hunters never mentions the deaths that come from picking the wrong mushroom, or how the pros avoid mistakes. In a book supporting and encouraging foraging I would have an explanation if not a warning about how to distinguish the delectable from the dangerous.
I note that one reviewer was disappointed that this book is not one about identifying mushrooms. I would answer this with this: but he does because he tells you which mushrooms he is gathering. So all the reader would need to do is to "Google" the mushroom for its identity.
I read fiction almost exclusively and sometimes fail to remember that there are writers like Langdon Cook who can make the reading just as pleasurable as a Philip Roth or an Elizabeth Strout.
In this book you will meet some of the most fascinating character, these mushroom hunters and the "supporting cast." And you will have truly wonderful hikes in truly beautiful and often wild spots that make up North America.
And as an added dividend, the book cover is just perfect in case you are one of those who like to have something good looking on your coffee table.
Top reviews from other countries
Even though he is writing more than ten years after the time I was in B.C. I lived on the Wet Coast for a few years and I have met people just like he is describing. It is a very interesting book and a rare glimpse of the life of people who travel on the mushroom trail.
I also liked how he lays out the economics of the trade and how it works.
Thank you






