Thirty years ago, Frances Moore Lappé, then a 26 year-old in Berkeley, wrote the groundbreaking Diet for
a Small Planet--a book that started a revolution in the way Americans think about food and hunger (and has since
gone on to sell 3 million copies and counting!). Lappé challenged the experts who were predicting imminent
famine. Revealing that the world actually produces enough to make us all chubby, she helped us see how we generate
the very food scarcity we say we fear. Most importantly, she showed how each of us has the power to choose the
opposite: a diet best for our bodies and also best for our planet.
Now Frances and her daughter, Anna, pick up where Diet for a Small Planet left off. Responding to the yearning
of more and more people for deeper meaning in their lives, the Lappés undertake a maverick mother-and-daughter
journey of discovery. Crossing five continents, the Lappés explore some of the most puzzling questions of
our time:
Why, as societies, do we create the very inequalities and devastation of nature that, as individuals, we abhor?
Are there paths we each can walk that will, in practical ways, heal our lives and help the planet?
How can we build communities in tune with nature's wisdom in which no one anywhere, has to worry about putting
food--safe, healthy food--on the table?
Searching for answers, Frances and Anna take us with them into worlds beneath the radar of the global media.
From the foothills of the Himalayas to the lush farms of Brittany, the Lappés expose the false tradeoffs
within corporate globalization: chemical agriculture or starvation; genetically modified foods or scarcity; corporate
capitalism or chaos. In Hope's Edge we discover, indisputably, that we have choice.
We travel to the San Francisco Bay Area to explore a revolutionary approach teaching children respect for the environment
and humanity as they grow food in the school's garden and then prepare it for each other--at the same time rejecting
corporate giants such as McDonald's, Coca-Cola, and Domino's Pizza that have infiltrated our school cafeterias.
Across the Bay, the Lappés discover the Garden Project, where former local prison inmates are working in
their own organic garden--a form of rehabilitation that is reducing re-arrest rates, assisting ex-convicts with
job placement, and feeding the community in turn.
We meet peasants in Brazil who are facing down big landowners to create vibrant communities and tackle the roots
of hunger in Latin America. We tour one of that continent's largest cities that has made good, healthy food a right
of citizenship. We celebrate the efforts of village women in Bangladesh, working with loans from the Grameen Bank
to lift themselves out of the viscous cycle of poverty. We meet poor villagers in Kenya who are turning back the
encroaching desert, and take heart from renegade farmers in Wisconsin, undeterred by widespread hardship, who are
learning to thrive while caring for the land. As we walk with these trailblazers who are transforming fear into
creative action, we can see possibilities for change in our own lives that before were invisible.
"In all these places," write the Lappés, "we discovered people who are not accepting corporate
global capitalism as it is but are evolving it so that growing and eating good food--and economic life itself--is
again embedded in life-affirming values and community."
An intimate mother-and-daughter journey, Hope's Edge is also a far-reaching, impeccably researched vision for social
and environmental transformation. The Lappés reveal strikingly parallel insights emerging across our planet--insights
springing us free from the prevailing thought traps that lock us personally and globally into self-destruction.
What the Lappés offer in place of these traps is a guiding framework gleaned from the breakthroughs of people
they meet on their journey--a framework as useful in grasping our global predicament as in finding meaning in our
lives. According to the Lappés, because food is our most primal need and common bond to the earth and to
one another, it has unique power to ground us in our personal search for meaning.
Hope's Edge also celebrates vegetarian, organic, and whole-foods culinary pioneers who in the last 30 years have
brought us back to the sensual pleasure of eating fresh, whole foods and reconnecting us to the earth and to those
who tend it. It features nearly seventy recipes from trailblazers such as Mollie Katzen (The Moosewood Cookbook),
Anna Thomas (The Vegetarian Epicure), and Alice Waters as well as mouth-watering menus from some our country's
most celebrated natural foods restaurants including Angelica Kitchen (New York City), The Millennium Restaurant
(San Francisco), and Chez Panisse (Berkeley, CA).
Join one of our country's foremost activist thinkers, Frances Moore Lappé, and her daughter, Anna, on a
trip around this small planet. Hope's Edge: The Next Diet For A Small Planet helps each of us find new courage
to trust ourselves and choose the world we want. For everyone who grew up with the original Diet for a Small Planet,
and for those who have just discovered it, the result is a compelling look back at where we've been and an inspirational
vision of the world we can choose.