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Home > Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food
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Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food
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By Paul Greenberg
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(64 Reviews)
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December 31, 1969 |
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284
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Our relationship with the ocean is undergoing a profound transformation. Whereas just three decades ago nearly everything we ate from the sea was wild, rampant overfishing combined with an unprecedented bio-tech revolution has brought us to a point where wild and farmed fish occupy equal parts of a complex and confusing marketplace. We stand at the edge of a cataclysm; there is a distinct possibility that our children's children will never eat a wild fish that has swum freely in the sea. In Four Fish, award-winning writer and lifelong fisherman Paul Greenberg takes us on a culinary journey, exploring the history of the fish that dominate our menus---salmon, sea bass, cod and tuna-and examining where each stands at this critical moment in time. He visits Norwegian mega farms that use genetic techniques once pioneered on sheep to grow millions of pounds of salmon a year. He travels to the ancestral river of the Yupik Eskimos to see the only Fair Trade certified fishing company in the world. He investigates the way PCBs and mercury find their way into seafood; discovers how Mediterranean sea bass went global; Challenges the author of Cod to taste the difference between a farmed and a wild cod; and almost sinks to the bottom of the South Pacific while searching for an alternative to endangered bluefin tuna. Fish, Greenberg reveals, are the last truly wild food - for now. By examining the forces that get fish to our dinner tables, he shows how we can start to heal the oceans and fight for a world where healthy and sustainable seafood is the rule rather than the exception.
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Paul Greenberg on Four Fish: Fix the Farm, Not the Salmon
When the New York Times reported in June of 2010 that the US Food and Drug Administration was ?seriously considering? approving a genetically modified Atlantic salmon for American consumption the cries from environmentalists and food reformers were, predictably, almost audible on the streets. The AquAdvantageŽ Salmon uses a ?genetic on-switch? from a fish called an ocean pout (a very different animal) in combination with a growth gene from a Chinook salmon to achieve double the growth rate of the unmodified creature. The animal?s creator, AquaBounty Technologies of Waltham, MA asserts that the fish will be sterile and grown in out-of-ocean bio-secure containment structures. Nevertheless the emotional worry of genetic contamination of wild fish, the public preoccupation with health risks a modified salmon could pose, and just the overall ick-factor consumers seem to have about GMO food were all on display across the foodie and environmental blogosphere a few days after the Times article ran. But, curiously, perhaps the loudest groan that I heard in response to the AquaBounty successes came from salmon farmers. ?What I have been noticing over the years,? Thierry Chopin, an aquaculture researcher based in New Brunswick, Canada wrote me, ?is that the aquaculture industry is not jumping to embrace what AquaBounty has been proposing.? For years salmon farmers have been waging a public relations war, trying to gain legitimacy as an industry that could be both profitable and produce more food for a hungry world. When a paper published in the journal Nature in 2000 revealed that it took more than three pounds of wild forage fish to grow a single pound of farmed salmon, the salmon industry responded through selective breeding, increased use of soy and other agricultural products and more efficient feeding practices to lower the wild fish use of farmed salmon to the point where some farms claim to have achieved a fish in-fish out ratio of close to 1 pound of wild fish for 1 pound of farmed salmon. When diseases like infectious Salmon Anemia and parasites like sea lice began to run rampant on salmon farms around the world, some regions, like the Bay of Fundy in Canada, instituted better fallowing and crop rotation practices and appear to have had some success in breaking disease and parasite cycles. But in spite of these improvements, a single mention of transgenic salmon in a major media outlet is enough to spoil whatever gains the industry has made in public perception. Indeed, many lay-people I talk with have the impression that transgenic salmon are already a regular part of the farmed salmon market, this despite the fact that there are still no transgenic salmon sold in the United States or anywhere else that I?ve encountered. Don?t get me wrong. I sincerely do not believe that the salmon industry has solved its environmental problems. But I do think that it suffers an unfair association with the AquaBounty project and that genetic modification distracts from what investment and research really needs to address. The two biggest problems with farming salmon are: **break** **break** 1) Salmon are grown in sea cages, often anchored amidst wild salmon migration routes. This can cause the fouling of waters with wastes and the transmission of diseases and parasites to already seriously threatened and endangered stocks of wild salmon. Selectively bred fish regularly escape and some suggest they may interfere with the lifecycles of wild fish. Even worse, entirely different species of salmon are often raised in non-native environments. Atlantic salmon are regularly farmed in the Pacific and often escape. **break** **break** 2) Farmed salmon consume a huge amount of wild forage fish. Even though feed efficiency on a per fish basis has improved dramatically, salmon farming overall has grown so much that the per-fish efficiency has been all but erased by a much larger overall presence of salmon farming in the world. Atlantic salmon, once limited to the northern latitudes of the northern hemisphere, are now farmed on every single continent save Antarctica. It?s possible farmed salmon escapees may have even reached that most southerly redoubt. Salmon farms exist as far south as Patagonia, South Africa and Tasmania. So what is the way forward and how do we deal with this transgenic issue? If I were tsar of all salmon farming and could redirect investment money at will, I might take all of those dollars that go into transgenic research and put that money into really confronting the problems that plague the industry. I might look to developing efficient, above ground, re-circulating aquaculture systems. These facilities allow fish to be grown in temperature-controlled environments without any interaction with the wild. Disease transfer and genetic pollution are greatly reduced if not eliminated altogether. Yonathan Zohar a professor and Chair of the Department of Marine Biotechnology at the University of Maryland Baltimore County's has created a test facility right in downtown Baltimore that grows an array of species and even manages to recycle the fish wastes into fuel-grade methane gas that can be used to run pumps or heat water. Though these systems are energy intensive the ability to build them in proximity to markets lessens food miles. Furthermore recirculating systems offer precisely controlled growing conditions and can bring fish to market in half the time as open sea cages. I might also try to expand on the work of Thierry Chopin who is piloting a program of Integrated Multi-Trophic Aquaculture or IMTA where mussels, edible seaweeds, and sea cucumbers are grown in conjunction with salmon in a complex polyculture. Rather than just trying to make an artificially efficient modified salmon, Chopin is trying to make a more efficient system where multiple crops radiate out from a single feed source. Because mussels, sea cucumbers and sea weed can all metabolize the wastes from salmon, they have a potential to neutralize and reuse the effluent that has plagued salmon farms in the past. Another place I might put my salmon dollars would be the development of alternative feeds that are synthesized from soy and algae and might eventually obviate the need for using wild forage fish in salmon feed. Finally, I might consider investing in a different fish altogether. Some critics of the aquaculture industry believe we should do away with the farming of salmonids altogether. But to my eye, there is a very entrenched market for salmon flesh and we might be better served finding a different salmon-like fish that has a smaller footprint. The most hopeful alternative I?ve come across is a fish called the arctic char. The arctic char is from the same taxonomic family as salmon, has pretty good feed conversion ratios, rich flesh, and most interestingly of all, because it frequently finds itself crammed into close quarters when its natural arctic lakes freeze, it has high disease resistance and takes extremely well to high stocking densities?densities that are necessary to make out-of-ocean aquaculture operations profitable. And this is exactly what?s happening with char. Most are grown in re-circulating, above ground tanks in Iceland and Canada. Of course some people will never embrace a farmed solution for fish. There is a camp that feels very strongly that farmed fish are uniformly bad for the world and inferior on the plate. I have to confess that I don?t always share this opinion. Arctic char strike me as a good environmental compromise and to my palate, they?re pretty tasty. --Paul Greenberg
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Customer Reviews: Add Your Own Review |
The Story of the Fish in Your Dinner, June 28, 2010
By Terry Sunday (El Paso, Texas United States)
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I love seafood. However, I live in arid West Texas, a place where good seafood is nonexistent, for both geographic and cultural reasons. What passes for a seafood restaurant here is (shudder) Red Lobster, and the fishmongers at local grocery stores just give you a blank stare when you ask about wild-caught Copper River salmon. Despite these difficulties, I am very (perhaps perversely) interested in the natural history of the seafood that is impossible for me to get, and Paul Greenberg's "Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food" is appetizer, main dish and dessert for curious pescetarians.
The four fish of the title are salmon, bass, tuna and cod, which are today the world's dominant wild-caught and farmed fish. Mr. Greenberg devotes a long chapter to each of these finned culinary staples. He ties their stories together by showing how each represents one discrete step that humanity has taken, sometimes over hundreds or thousands of years, to increase and control the tasty, nutritious largess of the sea. Salmon, for example, depend on clean, cold, free-flowing freshwater rivers, and was likely the first fish that early northern-hemisphere humans exploited. Sea bass, which inhabit shallow waters close to shore, were the catch of choice when Europeans first learned how to fish in the ocean. Cod live further out, off the continental shelves many miles offshore, and were the first fish subject to industrial-scale fishing by mammoth factory ships. Tuna live yet further out, in the deep oceans between the continents, and represent the last food fish that has not yet been "domesticated."
Mr. Greenberg uses footnoted historical and scientific information from academic reports and other sources, as well as his personal experiences and interviews with some colorful fishing industry characters, to build detailed and informative pictures of the state of these four fish in the world today. These are factual, balanced treatments of subjects that are practically guaranteed to set environmentalists, government regulators, fishermen and consumers at each others' throats in the dynamic, complicated world of modern large-scale aquaculture. He shows how issues such as sustainability, wild-caught vs. farmed fish, the environmental effects of fish farms, growth in consumer demand, concentrations of harmful pollutants in fish, etc., are all interrelated in an incredibly complex web of dependencies. Easing one problem invariably worsens others, and there are really no easy answers to the question of how we can best manage our production and consumption of these four fish to assure their safety, availability and future viability.
It's not a hopeless future. Mr. Greenberg offers some things we can do to mend our troubled relationship with the oceans and the life within them. Whether you agree with his conclusions or not, you should still find "Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food" to be an interesting and informative read. I recommend it highly if you have the slightest interest in finding out more about the fish on your plate.
89 of 93 people found the above review helpful.
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The limits of the sea, July 8, 2010
By J. Green (Los Angeles, California)
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Mankind has often looked upon the ocean as a bountiful place capable of providing a near-endless supply of food. We even sort of romanticize those who brave the elements, from Moby Dick and yesterday's whalers to today's "Deadliest Catch." And for reasons of abundance or convenience or perhaps just taste, we've settled upon four main fish which serve as our principal "seafood": salmon, bass, cod, and tuna. But, as fishing has become increasingly commercial and efficient, we're in danger of destroying the wild populations of these fish and the ecosystems they depend upon and that are dependent upon them.
Paul Greenburg has written an excellent and surprisingly readable book about our relationship with the sea and its bounty. He does this not from a solely environmentalist perspective, but also as a fisherman and one who enjoys eating fish. He discusses the advantages of wild vs. farmed fish - the destructive practices of each which imperil future stocks. With farming, in particular, the four are very poor candidates for captive rearing (although the lessons learned so far have been essential and can be applied elsewhere). He also explores potential replacements against a checklist of qualities that should ensure greater success (the same qualities that have been proven in terrestrial farming).
I was *very* surprised at how much I enjoyed this book. I've never been a huge eater of seafood, although I've recently begun ordering it more often when we eat out. But I most appreciated the scientific aspect of the book that seeks to find the best possible balance, moving beyond the simple red or green seafood cards to maximizing a sustainable harvest while protecting resources. He acknowledges there are no easy answers, but leans a little too heavily on regulation as if illegal poaching wouldn't increase with such measures. But overall, an important read for all those who are concerned about the future of the oceans and the last wild food.
31 of 35 people found the above review helpful.
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Should appeal to a wide audience, July 3, 2010
By InquiringMind (Redondo Beach, CA)
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Paul Greenberg's "Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food" is an insightful, entertaining, and compelling natural history and social commentary on the current state of commercial fishing, fish farming, recreational fishing, and worldwide fisheries management. The vast scope of this work is simplified by focusing on the four most popular eating fish: salmon, tuna, bass, and cod. In the process, the reader gains a solid overview of the topic. The book is packed with fascinating technical, scientific, social and historical details, but at no time did I feel overwhelmed...in fact, just the opposite: I could hardly put the book down. I was stunned to discover that "Four Fish" is a page-tuner!
The last time I found a natural history that was so compelling, it was Michael Pollan's "Omnivore's Dilemma." While I don't think this book will become another worldwide nonfiction bestseller like that one did, I would not be surprised to see it turned into a feature National Geographic Channel documentary. After all, the author is extremely engaging and a writer who frequently writes for that magazine.
The author's writing is personal, direct, honest, and easy-going. Reading the book felt like sitting down with a brilliant, enthusiastic buddy and listening to him tell you about the subject that commands his greatest passion. The book is full of delightful stories based on fascinating people who Greenberg interviewed and observed during the course of researching this book. Much of the scientific and technical information is passed on to the reader through artful, true-to-life storytelling. His stories unfold naturally and often overflow with humor and wit. There is a comfortable balance between the light and serious section. The later contain detailed facts, thoughtful philosophical, ethical, and personal reflections, and heartfelt recommendations.
The author demonstrates a wealth of knowledge on this topic gained from thorough academic research, in-depth interviews, and life-long personal experience as an avid recreational fisherman. The book has an extensive bibliographical notes section at the end with useful annotations.
This book should appeal to a wide audience of readers with diverse backgrounds and motivations. I am not a fisherman and have no connection to the fishing industry. My interest in the topic derives from my love of eating fish and my concern about the future of the species. I have recently taken college-level courses on this topic, and completed a semester-long independent study of wild versus farmed salmon. Greenberg's book provided me with a wealth of new and exciting information.
I hope the book sells well. It is vitally important that as many people as possible learn about the future of fish, our last widely consumed wild food. Through knowledge and appropriate action, people can make a difference. It may still be possible to save the oceans and rivers of the world and the wild fish that inhabit them.
26 of 30 people found the above review helpful.
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Choices, September 22, 2010
By Stephen T. Hopkins (Oak Park, Illinois)
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Paul Greenberg presents both problems and alternative solutions in his new book, Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food. Greenberg presents the history and current situation with four fish: salmon, cod, tuna and bass. He explores sustainability and the issue of wild and farmed fish. He presents what he calls four clearly achievable goals for wild fish: a reduction in fishing effort; no-catch areas of the ocean; protect unmanageable species, and protect the bottom of the food chain. This is a readable and informative presentation of an interesting issue. Any reader who's interested in fish, science or more knowledge about what we eat, will likely enjoy this book.
Rating: Three-star (Recommended)
16 of 18 people found the above review helpful.
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A dense but thorough look at marine ecosystems and the fisheries they support, June 27, 2010
By Omar Siddique (Ellicott City, MD USA)
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An insightful look at the last wild species that humans hunt in any quantity, the collapses of over-exploited populations, and the domestication of some of those animals.
This volume is timely, arriving when many marine ecosystems are past their tipping points, with threats coming from every direction, even as humans continue to harvest or destroy vast amounts of sealife as if the ocean was an inexhaustible resource. The collapse of fishery after fishery, high-value species replaced by lower-valued ones, commercial extinctions commonplace, and actual extinctions looming-- none of this seems to make an impression on peoples who largely act without any enlightened self-interest (ie, the cumulative effect of their individual actions, or anticipation of the predictable future). I fully expect that the next generation will rarely eat wild-caught fish, and certainly not of the profusion and bounty we've seen in seafood markets in the last century.
Greenberg's writing is full of well-researched information, but is at its most compelling when he relates his personal experience and history, and bogs down when he wanders too far off-topic into the background material, such as the discussion of Greece's desire for home-grown industry (part of his background on the farming of sea bass). The narrative would flow much more readily with more streamlined asides and introductions, since these distract from the serious issues surrounding the wholesale, and possibly permanent changes, we are causing to wild ecosystems, to sate our appetites for seafood.
Recommended for the in-depth look at the serious issues resulting from the collision of marine ecosystems and man's need to consume seafood from the top of the chain down, but you'll need to stay focused to get through some of the denser sections.
11 of 12 people found the above review helpful.
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An Eye-Opening Look into the Complexity of our Present and Future Fisheries, July 3, 2010
By alaskanoutfitting.com (St Paul, MN)
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This book is a brilliant step-back overview of the state of our fisheries. Although I felt like I was pretty knowledgeable on the subject, my eyes have been opened up to deeper level of complexity than I had ever considered. Especially on the economic and market driven side of the issue.
Perhaps, the best thing about this book is that it is not a pulpit the author uses to preach what you should or should not eat. Nor does it ask that the reader guiltily end all fish eating. What it is, is a contextual history of our relationship with seafood from the earliest day to the present where we find ourselves facing a lot of decisions regarding fishing and fish farming.
The narrative is centered on four fish that do a good job of capturing the story of fish and man.
Salmon- probably our first food fish, and our first foray into global, industrial fish farming.
European Sea Bass - our first complete victory in closing the circle on a marine fishes life cycle in captivity. As the author says, a Rosetta Stone to unlocking the propogation for nearly all species
Cod and Tuna - two examples that show that we are not doing the best to manage our fisheries, and how we may be misguided in our attempts to farm fish in general.
These four fish do a great job of illustrating how aquaculture has been driven by forces of economy, market, and tradition more than logic, reason, or science. These species has been chosen for domestication more for their pound for pound economic value rather than its compatibility to being farmed.
Using these four main characters, and a supporting cast of other species, the author demonstrates the failures, successes, and potential of human management of wild and domesticated stocks of fish. That is another joy of this book, it is not a doom and gloom look at our future, it is a reasoned and hopeful view of what we can do. And while it does not exactly spell out a plan, it does put forth a strong framework of how we can manage this resource and stop spending our principal, but live off the interest the ocean can return and the profits of intelligent aquaculture.
I'll never look at a fish on a plate the same again.
11 of 14 people found the above review helpful.
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The future of fish, June 7, 2010
By Stephen Balbach (Ashton, MD United States)
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The question Greenberg is most often asked is "What fish should I eat?" and in Four Fish he shows how difficult that question is. We all know wild salmon is better than farmed, but is that still true in 2010? Greenberg has some surprising answers. The book is strongest talking about the future of fish (which is the subtitle) and I learned a lot about fish farming, omega-3's, fish engineering, etc.. Greenberg is not limited to just four fish as he looks at a lot of "substitute" fish such as Tilapia. He seems to briefly touch on and update lots of commonly perceived wisdom about fish with the latest developments. For example the status of the Cod grounds off New England which have been closed since the collapse in the early 1990s.
Greenberg is a "seafood writer" (journalist) and this is his first book, previously he has written for magazines. His pedigree is a New England sports fisherman. The book is not "helicopter journalism" (writing outside field of expertise), it's not "green journalism" (although he does call it a "fish in trouble book"). Greenberg personally, and for enjoyment, spends time on party boats, gets up at 3am for Canyon tuna runs, while spewing his guts out in 5 foot seas and reeling in a barrel sized tuna. He doesn't make a big deal of it, but anyone whose done these things themselves will appreciate Greenberg's perspective as a sports fisherman. He believes small scale fisherman make better stewards of fish stock than large scale factory ships.
I'd recommend the book to anyone who fishes, in particular in the northeast since that is where some of the anecdotal stories are set - but Greenberg also travels to Vietnam, Norway, Alaska, Hawaii. If you've ever asked what fish to eat, this is a deeper and more nuanced answer that should also provide plenty of table talk. Finally it's just a breezy and enjoyable way to learn more about the current status of "fish in trouble", what's being done, and what to expect in the future. I came away cautiously optimistic about the future of fish.
9 of 11 people found the above review helpful.
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Fair, informative and well-reasoned; perhaps just a little too diffuse, June 9, 2010
By rabidreader (virginia usa)
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I recommend this book, but with just a little hesitation. I read it because I wanted reliable, science-based information on an issue where I have a strong interest and concern - the threat of a never-to-be-repaired environmental disaster as more and more species of fish move closer to extinction. I am probably typical in having a broad and impressionistic knowledge of what is happening in whaling, the massive floating factories that trail miles-wide nets that kill just anything that gets trapped in them, and the controversies about fish farming. Four Fish provides a pretty convincing and solid coverage of the issues, especially the evolution of fish farming and its opportunities, limits and risks. Its strength is that it has no political or social message to push and provides a thoughtful commentary along with easy to absorb explanations.
My hesitation comes from finding it a little too diffuse. It mixes three strands: the first is the author's own perceptions and experience, which does serve to humanize what could be an abstract subject; he pays attention to how we think about fish, its role in everyday life, and the people involved in all areas of fishing and farming. The second strand is selected discussions of and with personalities who played key developments in biological research and the fishing industry. These are useful illustrations that the author uses to add depth and practicality to the impersonal scientific and economic background.
The third strand is the four sections on the fish: salmon, sea bass, cod and tuna. These vary in coverage and at times wander a little; there is some repetition of theme and it skates over the surface a little too often. The information yield in terms of insights and analysis is a little less than it could have been and leaves many topics somewhat inconclusive. It's not a serious flaw and what is presented is relevant, lucid and well-explained. I'm not sure that I would have stuck with the book if it were on a comparable topic where I was not eager for information.
So, I recommend this as worth your time and expect that what you get out if it will depend on the interest in the subject that you bring to it - I don't think it will create that interest for you. Within its limits, it is a fine piece of work and I do appreciate its efforts to present the whole picture and not push a special agenda; it's pleasingly free of Doom-speak and I-know-best style of omniscient self-righteousness.
8 of 11 people found the above review helpful.
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"Why Did You Close the Season? We Haven't Caught Them All Yet.", June 5, 2010
By wildcatcreekbooks (Central Valley, CA)
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Sadly, the headline above is a quote from the book that sums up, all too well, the attitude of many commercial fishermen. The attitude exists that there will always be another species to fish when one runs out and that until the species is no longer present in sufficient quantity to be commercially viable, then fishing for it should be allowed to continue.
The author has taken four well known (and well liked by diners) species and evaluated where we are with wild populations and what is being done on in the aquaculture world to create more of these fish for restaurants to put onto diners' plates. The author describes each species and gives a relatively brief summary of why the species is in danger in the wild. He also details efforts to commercially farm the species and why this may or may not be a good idea. In cases where there are alternate fish that could be sustainably farmed, the author details what is being done to raise them and why they have not become more readily available to the public.
The book presents a good summation of where we are with commercial fisheries and with the aquaculture community. It details the problems of the oceans and why solutions must be found to create sustainable fisheries and sustainable fish farming to provide protein for earth's population. The author provides his solutions, which may or may not be correct, but provide a place to start before time runs short.
The book is a good overview of the problem and should be a starting point for discussion. If you are interested in where we are headed and how we might change things, or you are a fish enthusiast, you will like this book. I found the book to be relevant, well written and of great interest!
7 of 10 people found the above review helpful.
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An thought-provoking read akin to the Omnivore's Dilemma, June 10, 2010
By Naomi (Storm) (Texas)
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"Four Fish" was an interesting read on the evolution of fish as a modern food source for humanity. It takes a look at the evolution of fish from being a wild-caught beast from the depths; to a mass-produced and in some cases genetically-engineered hybrid. Much of the dialog is spent explaining how the movement to add fish to our diets forced a move to a more "fish farm" based industry in order to satiate the current needs. Ironically in our move to create more fish to eat, we've helped destroy many of the fish in the wild.
The concepts put forth are very interesting, however most of the book is written from a first person perspective in a "storyteller" fashion, which unfortunately sometimes limits the amount of actual fact included. While the narrative helps humanize the cause and attempts to establish a closeness with the reader, other times it feels as if the author is droning on a bit too long and you're waiting for him to get to the point.
"Four Fish" is similar to The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, however a little less "readable" in my eyes. That being said, the book should be tagged as a "should read" for anyone who is concerned with the plight of the world's quickly dwindling stockpile of wild fish.
7 of 11 people found the above review helpful.
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Narrator makes listening difficult, August 29, 2010
By A. Rosen
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This review pertains to the audio book. I was looking forward to this book as I very much enjoyed Song for Blue Ocean, but the narrator made listening difficult. At times overly dramatic and at times unconvincing, I couldn't even get through the first disc.
6 of 18 people found the above review helpful.
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A cautionary tale for our times, August 5, 2010
By Exiled Yankee (usa)
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"Four Fish" is an eye-opener.
I chose this book out of a love of fish in general and as an enlightenment into the industry of fishing, and I certainly got what I was looking for - but not, perhaps, what I expected.
The author, Paul Greenberg, takes the reader on an exhaustive journey into the recent history of four varieties of popular food fish - salmon, cod, tuna, and sea bass - devoting a chapter to each. I must confess not a lot of interest in sea bass - but was greatly interested in the other three.
Mr Greenberg begins with salmon. I knew some of what he had to say already, or variations of it, having heard dark rumors about farmed salmon for years - how the farms aren't run well, how the fish are crammed together swimming in filth, etc. Some of that, apparently, is true; I long ago adopted the practice of buying only wild-caught salmon. This book brings further light on the subject. There is, apparently, very little or no wild Atlantic salmon fishery; that Atlantic salmon you're buying at Whole Foods is, for the most part, from Icelandic farms. Not that it isn't good; it's just not wild; and some of the farms, at least, are being run in a more responsible way these days. Wild-caught remains a uniquely Alaskan industry.
Mr Greenberg goes through great research lining up everything that constitutes salmon harvesting, and it is disheartening reading about all the rivers that, historically, salmon used to visit during spawning that are no longer available to them. The chapter left me with a profound respect for this ocean resource, along with the precipitous decline in bounty just in the last decade. Consumption is outstripping supply and appears to be continuing to do so, with no recourse.
The next fish, sea bass, he tackles with the same investigative vigor, as he does with cod and finally tuna. The salmon chapter stands basically on its own because there is no fish that comes close to salmon in type, at least in any amount; amongst the other three he has chosen to write about, substitutions for these fish have been attempted, be it hoki from New Zealand, barramundi from Australia, basa or tra from the Far East (and when I read the origins of one of those, it gave me real pause; I've eaten some of it, and had I known its history, probably would have passed), and a new - at least to consumers - variety, kampachi from Hawaii, which is trying to fill a niche held by bluefin tuna which is in perilous decline.
What the book comes down to is not a primer on what kind of fish we should be eating, but what we should be doing to preserve the species of fish we have decimated in our pursuit of sea protein. I never gave the slightest thought, until reading this book, that the ubiquitous tuna might someday not exist as a food fish; it's always, in my lifetime, been there, and I guess I always thought it would be. I knew from watching the fishing epics on the Discovery Channel that they were wildly valuable, even more than swordfish, but for some complacent reason never considered them endangered. We should consider all these varieties we have indiscriminately pursued over the centuries to be endangered, if we are to take this book to heart. If conservation and restoration of species does not become a priority, the balance of life will be thrown off irreversibly.
Though it gets necessarily technical often, this is a readable and somewhat frightening book - one that should be owned by everyone interested in preserving both the natural world and our food sources. Highly recommended.
5 of 8 people found the above review helpful.
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Fair, well balanced, educational and fun to read, June 3, 2010
By wulfstan (San Jose, CA United States)
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This is Paul Greenberg's first full length book, but he is no new author, having written for a number of magazines and newspapers, including the NYT, National Geographic, and others. He has received several awards for excellence in food journalism.
This is one of the best "first books" I have read, reading quite a bit like a cross between Richard Ellis- the master of readable Marine Biology for the layman, and Michael Pollan- who is the best food source writer I have read. High praise indeed, being compared to those two masters of entertaining and educational non-fiction. But this book deserves it.
You'd expect from the title and blurbs that this book would be a rather dry exposition on the evils of over-fishing and aquaculture. However, it is enlivened by the authors own "fish stories" and personal anecdotes. He includes on-the-scene personal hands-on reporting, too, he's not afraid to get his hands dirty- or rather (if you have done any deep-sea fishing) more like "scaly and fishy smelling".
It also is carefully and well balanced. For example, if you read about farm vs. wild caught salmon, you'll generally get one of two viewpoints- that one of these is fantastic and great, and the other is eviiiil and never to be eaten. Which is Good and which is Evil seems to depend upon the source, but in either case, it's always been a black or white choice. Paul here makes no such judgment- the good and the bad of both "harvesting" methods is covered, and ways to improve both are discussed. I particularly agreed with his several suggestions to make salmon farming more eco-sensitive, including methods to use polyculture to fix several of the worst ecological transgressions of farmed salmon. And, he does this is a entertaining and well researched manner.
Although the title is "Four Fish" (the book mostly covers Salmon, Seabass, Cod and Tuna), coverage of other fish is included- Tra and Tilapia, for instance.
The book had some interesting conclusions, including the author's Four Priorities:
1- Reduction in fishing effort including moving away from government subsidized fishing.
2- Increase in "no-catch" preserves.
3- Global protection of un-manageable species.
4- Protection of the bottom of the food chain.
Overall, an excellent and thought-provoking read. I am looking forward to the author's next book.
5 of 8 people found the above review helpful.
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Don't eat bluefin tuna. We want to keep them around!, July 21, 2010
By author of My Friend Nick .. (Rancho Mirage, CA United States)
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This is a difficult book to review because it was a difficult book to read. Not that it isn't excellently written by one who has an encyclopedic, lifelong built-up knowledge of fish and the sea, but because the subject is painful to read about in its present plight: a potentially depleted ocean...tamed fish...closure of the life cycle.
What next - a sky without birds?
I certainly was in the dark (and I don't mean the ocean depths) about the status of fish and the condition of the sea in our time. That's why I chose to read this book. So as not to be in the dark anymore.
But sometimes the light is painful. Nevertheless, one would hope that as many people as possible read this important book, and that it becomes mandatory reading in high schools and colleges. The only effective working solution that I can fathom to bring the dire problems outlined into public awareness is the making of a mega-documentary film with a famous and esteemed vocal sponsor, along the lines of Al Gore's 2006 documentary film, An Inconvenient Truth. Come on, Steven Spielberg, step up to the plate! Or if you don't have time, please, please find someone who does.
I have problems with portions of the book, especially the author's putdown and haphazard dismissal of vegetarianism not contributing even a whit to a possible solution, deeming vegetarians who eat fish so-called vegetarians. I find the paradoxes within him alarming, and almost stopped reading the book when he describes a fishing trip where the federal law was that a codfish short of 22 inches should be thrown back into the sea, admitting that as the fishing got better, he changed his attitude towards the short fish, not removing the hooks gently, but ripping and pulling them out, even putting his fingers in their gills, then throwing them to what I assume would be a certain, even painful death.
On another occasion, in 2006 he wrote an editorial for the New York Times in which he declared that people shouldn't eat big fish. No ifs and buts about it. Two weeks later at a family dinner party he was offered two choices: a mini-sirloin steak or a bluefin tuna carpaccio. Yes, he chose the bluefin, much to the consternation of his young daughter who made the other choice, addressing her father as a hypocrite, thereby giving him a lesson in character building. Shouldn't it have been the other way around?
There are some things I didn't learn about: antibiotics given to farm raised fish, and their effect on humans; what role is offshore drilling (even before our recent national tragedy) playing in harming the ocean? and what about shrimp and scallops - is their population also decreasing? Are they safe to eat and, if so, the inevitable question: farm raised or wild?
Before I read this book, I was (what the author refers to as) a so-called vegetarian. Now I am a 100% vegetarian with no struggle towards temptation at all. Protein is available in other ways. And I shall find them.
Read this book. It's important!
5 of 9 people found the above review helpful.
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I can't say enough good about this book. It is an eye-opener ... very good information., June 10, 2010
By value seeker (Amazon Heaven)
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This is an interesting book with good perspectives on how the fish industry has changed. He follows 4 different fish through the years. How these fish have changed and are still changing. He talks about both wild and farm raised fish without bias. It is all up to the reader to decide. I found this book to be informative, educational, and a really good read. I was surprised at how much the fishing industry has changed over time. This book is easy to read in that it is not overly statistical.
5 of 12 people found the above review helpful.
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Seriously lacking morals., November 24, 2011
By don'tsleep
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The book is pretty good, and getting near the end, you start to wonder when he will make drastic conclusions (since fish stocks are crashing). And then once you get to the conclusion, you realise that the author has completely muddled up his morals when it comes to making any prescription.
Amongst other problems: he admits that it only makes sense to be vegetarian. Then dismisses the whole concept since he went back to eating meat. And dismisses it as an option for others (truly the most efficient option, the most moral option, etc) since he went back to eating meat.
His whole "replace industrial techniques with artisanal fishing" kind of makes no sense. That's like me saying, stop making computers in factories by the millions, we should only have small scale computer makers who make much less computers. Kind of easy to say but doesn't actually help if everyone is asking for millions of computers.
Anyways.. All in all, not happy with the book. Apolitical book about something that needs real morals/convictions. Stack this under the same as the Omnivore's Dilemma.. ie) The status quo just needs a few tweaks and we'll all be fine. Or at the very least don't ring any alarm bells.
5 of 8 people found the above review helpful.
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Don't eat bluefin tuna. We want to keep them around!, July 21, 2010
By Desert Dweller (Rancho Mirage, CA United States)
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This is a difficult book to review because it was a difficult book to read. Not that it isn't excellently written by one who has an encyclopedic, lifelong built-up knowledge of fish and the sea, but because the subject is painful to read about in its present plight: a potentially depleted ocean...tamed fish...closure of the life cycle.
What next - a sky without birds?
I certainly was in the dark (and I don't mean the ocean depths) about the status of fish and the condition of the sea in our time. That's why I chose to read this book. So as not to be in the dark anymore.
But sometimes the light is painful. Nevertheless, one would hope that as many people as possible read this important book, and that it becomes mandatory reading in high schools and colleges. The only effective working solution that I can fathom to bring the dire problems outlined into public awareness is the making of a mega-documentary film with a famous and esteemed vocal sponsor, along the lines of Al Gore's 2006 documentary film, An Inconvenient Truth. Come on, Steven Spielberg, step up to the plate! Or if you don't have time, please, please find someone who does.
I have problems with portions of the book, especially the author's putdown and haphazard dismissal of vegetarianism not contributing even a whit to a possible solution, deeming vegetarians who eat fish so-called vegetarians. I find the paradoxes within him alarming, and almost stopped reading the book when he describes a fishing trip where the federal law was that a codfish short of 22 inches should be thrown back into the sea, admitting that as the fishing got better, he changed his attitude towards the short fish, not removing the hooks gently, but ripping and pulling them out, even putting his fingers in their gills, then throwing them to what I assume would be a certain, even painful death.
On another occasion, in 2006 he wrote an editorial for the New York Times in which he declared that people shouldn't eat big fish. No ifs and buts about it. Two weeks later at a family dinner party he was offered two choices: a mini-sirloin steak or a bluefin tuna carpaccio. Yes, he chose the bluefin, much to the consternation of his young daughter who made the other choice, addressing her father as a hypocrite, thereby giving him a lesson in character building. Shouldn't it have been the other way around?
There are some things I didn't learn about: antibiotics given to farm raised fish, and their effect on humans; what role is offshore drilling (even before our recent national tragedy) playing in harming the ocean? and what about shrimp and scallops - is their population also decreasing? Are they safe to eat and, if so, the inevitable question: farm raised or wild?
Before I read this book, I was (what the author refers to as) a so-called vegetarian. Now I am a 100% vegetarian with no struggle towards temptation at all. Protein is available in other ways. And I shall find them.
Read this book. It's important!
5 of 9 people found the above review helpful.
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Fish... to conserve them, first understand the issues..., July 31, 2010
By R Schmidt (Honolulu, HI USA)
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Is cod gone forever?
Is aquaculture the savior of wild fish stocks?
Does farmed Atlantic salmon, in Chile or British Columbia, make ecological or economic sense?
Have we destroyed Atlantic bluefin tuna populations?
What, exactly, is a "seabass?"
This book, Four Fish: The Future Of The Last Wild Food, by Paul Greenberg, was just going to be another book on the declining populations of wild fish. Or so I thought.
I was wrong. It is much more than just a book on fish. The book contains information on four species or "species-groups" in great demand: salmon, tuna, bass, and cod. In addition to discussing the issues - biological, economic, and social - that put these stocks in peril, Greenberg also discusses the alternatives to these species in the face of such ferocious demand.
Here are some of the interesting tidbits I uncovered (from an advance uncorrected copy, but I doubt these comments change in the final edition):
"Every year more than 3 BILLION [italicized] pounds of farmed salmon are produced, around three times the amount of wild fish harvested."
"The salmon-farming industry requires an enormous amount of food. And with salmon a lot of that food consists of other fish that are harvested from the wild."
"What would happen if every human on earth demanded wild salmon instead of farmed salmon? Instant extinction." And "It would be wonderful if all the salmon we eat could be wild. But as one oceanographer said to me recently, to continue to eat large wild fish at the rate we've been eating them we would need 'four or five oceans' to support the current population." [This really is a nonsensical issue, since people simply cannot have whatever they want, whether cars, medical insurance, or a 1975 bottle of Robert Mondavi cabernet sauvignon.]
"The problem [of endangered species recovery] then becomes much more complex than dealing with an endangered species like, say, wolves, where there is no longer any harvest pressure. There may be arguments about how many wolves we want, but there is no 'wolf industry' waiting, guns in hand, to pick them off if the population reaches harvestable size." [This is an interesting example, since this is exactly what is happening in Idaho and Montana. There is extreme pressure to harvest these animals, with thousands of people buying hunting permits to harvest hundreds of wolves. And these permit holders are certainly waiting, "guns in hand"!]
Regarding the "shifting baseline syndrome:" "Ghettoized within the insular realm of fisheries science, the theory has profound implications as a sociological phenomenon as much as a biological one." And "It is almost a willful forgetting - the means by which our species, generation by generation, finds reasonableness amid the irrational destruction of the greatest natural food system on earth."
"If tuna had had a voice and the power of reason, it would have screamed and pleaded at this point" [being caught and laying on deck of a fishing boat, captured by... Greenberg. Throughout, he continues to catch and eat fish. I suggest he read the article "When swordfish conservation biologists eat swordfish," by Bearzi]. Greenberg later writes, eating bluefin tuna carpaccio, "...I chose the bluefin. I quickly scarfed it down and nearly forgot about the delicious paper-thin slices after they had been washed away with a glass of pinot grigio." His daughter then called him a hypocrite. Yay, you go girl! Greenberg, you've defined yourself as part of the problem.
"Ever since the Give Swordfish a Break campaign, more and more nonprofits began embracing the idea of choosing 'good' fish over 'bad' fish as a means of saving the ocean. Today millions of consumers [and I am one, having been responsible for distributing at least 3000 cards] carry around seafood safety cards with lists of good fish (typically labeled green), sort-of-good fish (yellow), and outright-bad ones (stop sign red). But frequently these lists are not connected to specific policy goals, leading consumers to believe that just through their abstinence they are saving the sea." No, what they are doing is not investing their money in these industries of destruction, as well as maintaining their ethical and moral compass. Every movement has a beginning. And every movement also has nay-sayers.
"To most people an animal is either food or wildlife. If a fish ends up in the market, humans will come to the obvious conclusion that it is food; they then choose to eat it, even if they are warned that the fish is endangered or contaminated with mercury." Or if the fish is 100 years old.
Okay... these selected comments might sound negative, but this is a very interesting book, and gets you thinking. So what does Greenberg suggest for a solution?
- A profound reduction in fishing effort.
- The conversion of significant portions of ocean ecosystems to no-catch areas.
- The global protection of unmanageable species.
- The protection of the bottom of the food chain.
"In spite of campaigns, boycotts, publications, documentaries, and every other means of persuasion known, the global human population keeps growing and humans keep eating more fish every year, not just in aggregate but on a per capita basis... So if we take as a given that humankind will keep eating fish, more and more of it every year, then we need to come up with a way to direct that appetite away from sensitive, unmanageable wildlife and usher it toward sustainable, productive domesticated fish." This didn't work for tigers, elephants, and whales.
"What is needed above all is a standard for boosting fish supplies in as sustainable a manner as possible." Actually, what would happen if, say, 5 percent of current fish eaters quit eating fish? What would happen if 10% more of the earth's population became vegetarians?
Again, an interesting book. It really got me thinking, particularly about aquaculture issues and seafood.
4 of 6 people found the above review helpful.
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Very Informative, July 19, 2010
By Erika Mitchell (E. Calais, VT USA)
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This book presents investigations into the current status of four popular fish: salmon, bass, cod and tuna. Greenberg, a journalist, grew up fishing off the coast of Long Island, where, even as a teen, he noticed declining fish stocks. In this book, he set out to discover what had happened to the fish he used to catch, and how industrial fish harvesting and farming has affected the population and supply of salmon, bass, cod, and tuna. Greenberg takes up each fish in turn, interspersing personal anecdotes and fishing stories with a historical overview of the species, and a description of how fish farming has affected the availability and health of the species. Sources for Greenberg's research are provided in end notes at the back of the book.
This book is quite fascinating, even for someone who doesn't fish, like myself. Greenberg's personal accounts of fishing trips provide an excellent balance to his research on the science of fish breeding and farming. Together with interviews with traditional fishermen and chefs, they provide a well-rounded, accessible, and compelling overview of the current status of these species. Greenberg's general message is a bit sobering--there just aren't enough fish to go around. Through over-fishing, poisoning and destruction of habitat, damming of rivers, and most importantly, increasing demand, fish stocks are rapidly declining. While there are some bright spots, such as a partial return to productivity for fisheries such as Georges Bank (after complete closures), in general, wild fish are rapidly declining. Fish farming generally produces an inferior product with environmental costs, but may be the only way to keep up with the growing demands of growing populations. And even then, current fish farming practices aren't sustainable when based on fish with poor feed conversion ratios, especially if the feed is produced from wild stocks of smaller fish, which are also being over-harvested.
Nutritionists especially should take note of Greenberg's point that recommendations to eat fish twice a week are simply unrealistic and unsustainable. The current wild catch of fish is 170 billion pounds worldwide, an amount that is proving to be unsustainable, not allowing enough wild fish to remain to reproduce. Yet, if everyone on the planet were to follow dietary recommendations of eating 2 servings of fish per week, the harvest would need to increase to 230 billion pounds per year. How ethical is it to recommend consuming a product at levels far above what the world can support? If supply is lower than demand, then costs will be higher, and only those with higher means will be able to afford the product--how ethical is it to release general dietary recommendations that logically, only more affluent people can afford? In an ideal world, there would be fish enough for everyone to get sufficient omega 3s from wild-caught fish, but our world has too many people and too few fish to meet that ideal. Thus, nutritionists need to rethink their recommendations, and draw back from pushing fish consumption at unsustainable levels. It should be noted that farmed fish could fulfill some of the unmet demand, but for how long? Over-exploited supplies of feeder fish, higher toxin content of farmed fish, and other environmental concerns present serious problems for relying on farmed fish for our food.
Overall, this book is well researched and well written, and is recommended to anyone with an interest in food, fish, or nutrition.
4 of 6 people found the above review helpful.
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Fish... to conserve them, first understand the issues..., July 31, 2010
By R Schmidt (Honolulu, HI USA)
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Is cod gone forever?
Is aquaculture the savior of wild fish stocks?
Does farmed Atlantic salmon, in Chile or British Columbia, make ecological or economic sense?
Have we destroyed Atlantic bluefin tuna populations?
What, exactly, is a "seabass?"
This book, Four Fish: The Future Of The Last Wild Food, by Paul Greenberg, was just going to be another book on the declining populations of wild fish. Or so I thought.
I was wrong. It is much more than just a book on fish. The book contains information on four species or "species-groups" in great demand: salmon, tuna, bass, and cod. In addition to discussing the issues - biological, economic, and social - that put these stocks in peril, Greenberg also discusses the alternatives to these species in the face of such ferocious demand.
Here are some of the interesting tidbits I uncovered (from an advance uncorrected copy, but I doubt these comments change in the final edition):
"Every year more than 3 BILLION [italicized] pounds of farmed salmon are produced, around three times the amount of wild fish harvested."
"The salmon-farming industry requires an enormous amount of food. And with salmon a lot of that food consists of other fish that are harvested from the wild."
"What would happen if every human on earth demanded wild salmon instead of farmed salmon? Instant extinction." And "It would be wonderful if all the salmon we eat could be wild. But as one oceanographer said to me recently, to continue to eat large wild fish at the rate we've been eating them we would need 'four or five oceans' to support the current population." [This really is a nonsensical issue, since people simply cannot have whatever they want, whether cars, medical insurance, or a 1975 bottle of Robert Mondavi cabernet sauvignon.]
"The problem [of endangered species recovery] then becomes much more complex than dealing with an endangered species like, say, wolves, where there is no longer any harvest pressure. There may be arguments about how many wolves we want, but there is no 'wolf industry' waiting, guns in hand, to pick them off if the population reaches harvestable size." [This is an interesting example, since this is exactly what is happening in Idaho and Montana. There is extreme pressure to harvest these animals, with thousands of people buying hunting permits to harvest hundreds of wolves. And these permit holders are certainly waiting, "guns in hand"!]
Regarding the "shifting baseline syndrome:" "Ghettoized within the insular realm of fisheries science, the theory has profound implications as a sociological phenomenon as much as a biological one." And "It is almost a willful forgetting - the means by which our species, generation by generation, finds reasonableness amid the irrational destruction of the greatest natural food system on earth."
"If tuna had had a voice and the power of reason, it would have screamed and pleaded at this point" [being caught and laying on deck of a fishing boat, captured by... Greenberg. Throughout, he continues to catch and eat fish. I suggest he read the article "When swordfish conservation biologists eat swordfish," by Bearzi]. Greenberg later writes, eating bluefin tuna carpaccio, "...I chose the bluefin. I quickly scarfed it down and nearly forgot about the delicious paper-thin slices after they had been washed away with a glass of pinot grigio." His daughter then called him a hypocrite. Yay, you go girl! Greenberg, you've defined yourself as part of the problem.
"Ever since the Give Swordfish a Break campaign, more and more nonprofits began embracing the idea of choosing 'good' fish over 'bad' fish as a means of saving the ocean. Today millions of consumers [and I am one, having been responsible for distributing at least 3000 cards] carry around seafood safety cards with lists of good fish (typically labeled green), sort-of-good fish (yellow), and outright-bad ones (stop sign red). But frequently these lists are not connected to specific policy goals, leading consumers to believe that just through their abstinence they are saving the sea." No, what they are doing is not investing their money in these industries of destruction, as well as maintaining their ethical and moral compass. Every movement has a beginning. And every movement also has nay-sayers.
"To most people an animal is either food or wildlife. If a fish ends up in the market, humans will come to the obvious conclusion that it is food; they then choose to eat it, even if they are warned that the fish is endangered or contaminated with mercury." Or if the fish is 100 years old.
Okay... these selected comments might sound negative, but this is a very interesting book, and gets you thinking. So what does Greenberg suggest for a solution?
- A profound reduction in fishing effort.
- The conversion of significant portions of ocean ecosystems to no-catch areas.
- The global protection of unmanageable species.
- The protection of the bottom of the food chain.
"In spite of campaigns, boycotts, publications, documentaries, and every other means of persuasion known, the global human population keeps growing and humans keep eating more fish every year, not just in aggregate but on a per capita basis... So if we take as a given that humankind will keep eating fish, more and more of it every year, then we need to come up with a way to direct that appetite away from sensitive, unmanageable wildlife and usher it toward sustainable, productive domesticated fish." This didn't work for tigers, elephants, and whales.
"What is needed above all is a standard for boosting fish supplies in as sustainable a manner as possible." Actually, what would happen if, say, 5 percent of current fish eaters quit eating fish? What would happen if 10% more of the earth's population became vegetarians?
Again, an interesting book. It really got me thinking, particularly about aquaculture issues and seafood.
4 of 6 people found the above review helpful.
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Dark side of farm fish, August 10, 2010
By salty_sailor (Washington)
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Greenberg's book "Four Fish" was good but I came away with the feeling that Greenberg thought more of wild fish as just a commodity to toss into the corporate farmyard.
With brains and bodies developed to chase ocean prey and with nature's own GPS tracking technology, wild salmon have navigated thousands of ocean miles back to their native streams in order to complete their circle of life. Not so for farmed salmon (or cod, tuna or sea bass).
Farmed salmon need not bother foraging for food or traveling days upstream for sex, humans have been kind enough to scour the bottom of the Bering Sea with huge trawlers, dragging up entire ecosystems, just to make food getting a little easier for our salmon.
Of course being raised in crowded pens, peeing, crapping and thrashing over each other just to compete for dry lifeless fish pellets from the Bering sea isn`t as much fun as chasing live herring nor is having your belly slit with a sharp knife to mix sperm with eggs very romantic, but efficient it is. A bean counter looks at it this way. A wild fish needs ten pounds of feed whereas a farm fish needs only 5 pounds. If you think of these savings you will not get tree-hugging silly about the wretched shattered life of a wild thing that has been morphed into a farmed animal.
Long gone are the days that farm animals scratched for seed, rooted around in a muddy pig sty or munched their way through the grasslands of the mid-west. It's all very efficient. All are now caged with millions of other frantic bodies where the stench is strong enough to knock a buzzard off a sun ripened corpse. The four fish discussed in this book are the latest added animals shoe-boxed for efficiency.
Greenberg seemed more worried upping the production of farmed fish then keeping fish wild. Did he once mention the main source of overfishing, the overpopulation of humans on this planet? No, and the irony of our own efficiency is now tied to farmed fish. We are all thrashing and fighting for scarce resources, living in smaller and smaller cages, piled higher and higher as we pollute our environment as well as theirs. The next time you are gridlocked on I-5, breathing the fumes of technology, do you ever wonder where all of this has led us? Because we have been so bean counting efficient at raising 6.5 billion of us, catching live wild seafood will be just a grandpa memory as we drive to the marketplace for an affordable fillet of Tillapia (once called the latrine fish in this book). Yum, yum.
3 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
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A must read for eco-friendly fish lovers, July 18, 2010
By Sharon Messitte
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Intriguing in that Greenberg, a life long and ocean wise fisherman, has a poignant respect for the "four fish" we are most likely to find on our plates, and which are seriously threatened even as we scarf them down. Particularly liked his non-polemic approach in outlining reasonable approaches to both fishing up and preserving this often overlooked incredibly valuable natural resource, and the medium which sustains it. I like the quote re
no one would ever cast a net over the Serengeti preserve, catching up and killing every beast available, in our search for wildebeasts alone,yet the big fish companies do not hesitate to do exactly that, despoiling not only the fish population but the 'bottom' source.
An exceptionally informative and elegantly written book, which should appeal to non-fishermen and anglers alike. Highly recommended!
3 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
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Four Stars for Four Fish, December 28, 2010
By Cook in a Bar (Washington, DC)
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Before the holidays I finished an interesting book by frequent New York Times Magazine contributor, Paul Greenberg, entitled Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food. Greenberg is a lifelong fisherman and he clearly struggles with the contradiction of saving fish and their environment, but writing with passion about the thrill of hunting them.
The book is divided into chapters on salmon, sea bass, cod, and tuna - the four fish most prized by consumers and therefore facing drastic reductions to their wild stock. Each section describes basically the same cycle. There were times of abundance, when fish found plenty of prey and nutrients and could freely follow their patterns of migration. As Greenberg put it wild fish seemed to be "a crop, harvested from the sea, that magically grew itself back every year. A crop that never required planting." Then came pollution and changes in water temperatures, along with blockages to spawning routes, and of course, overfishing. He writes of the drastic decrease of wild populations, the depredations of industrial fishing, and the uncertain efforts to slow the decline by setting catch limits and closing some historic fishing grounds.
Greenberg also examines fish farming, which accounts for most of the salmon and sea bass now sold. He details their unsuccessful efforts to deal with the problems of pollution, genetic contamination that threaten wild stocks, and the question of flavor differences.
He acknowledges that mounting food demand is inevitable. In fact, the world's per capita consumption of fish has increased from 20 pounds in the 1960s to 36 pounds in recent years. The oceans cannot keep up with our demands. He reluctantly concedes that the solution is fish farming, because otherwise, the pressure on wild stocks will be uncontainable. However, he argues that farming should shift from the four premium fish where it squeezes the wild population, to other species. One example Greenberg provided is tilapia. These fish breed in fresh water, multiply rapidly, and live on a vegetarian diet, thereby reducing the need for the industrial harvesting of the tiny marine life that salmon, cod, bass, and tuna require.
Greenberg also addressed an issue of concern to many contentious eaters. Which fish can we eat without guilt? Unfortunately, this is a question not easily answered by looking at Monterey Bay Aquarium's seafood-watch card. In truth, he shows, there is rarely such a thing as a good wild fish for any of us to eat, at least not if all of us eat it.
Greenberg lays out the grim realities, but he still manages to sound hopeful about the future of fish, and I feel as though I almost met some of the innovators Greenberg describes who are attempting to deal with the scarcities.
For all his defense of innovation and farming, Greenberg without a doubt sides with wild fish. In the case of tuna he calls for the kind of ban that has been applied to whales. "The passion to save the bluefin is as strong as the one to kill them, and these dual passions are often contained within the body of a single fisherman."
He describes the tension between seeing fish as wildlife versus food. "Wild fish did not come into this world just to be our food," he argues. "They came into this world to pursue their own individual destinies. If we hunt them and eat them, we must hunt them with care and eat them with the fullness of our appreciation. We must come to understand that eating the last wild food is, above all, a privilege."
Four Fish is a marvelous exploration of that contradiction, one that is reflected in the stance and behavior of all nations that fish. It is a necessary book for anyone truly interested in what we take from the sea to eat.
[...]
[...]
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A much-needed analysis of the cost of our craving for fish, April 15, 2011
By Scott Schiefelbein (Portland, Oregon United States)
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I officially subscribe to the notion that, when it comes to eating, there are no bad fish, but some fish are better than others (and some fish just need a better chef). Our home town of Portland, Oregon, provides a daily offering of amazing fish selections, and our family tries to eat fish about three times a week. But like so many, I really didn't understand the true cost of the smorasbord that allows me the enviable choice between fresh Chinook, ahi, tilapia, etc. for dinner virtually whenever I want.
Paul Greenberg's "Four Fish" offers a quick, clever education for the die-hard fish-eater. Divided into four extensive chapters - one each on salmon, tuna, cod and bass, along with a concluding paragraph on some ideas for saving the global fisheries - "Four Fish" reminds the reader that we can no longer think about fish the way we have for so long. For centuries, Greenberg notes, fish-eaters have treated ocean-going fish as a perpetual resource that cost nothing to raise and relatively little to harvest. Eventually, we realized the grave harm we were inflicting on fish populations through overfishing, pollution, damming rivers, and otherwise messing with Mother Nature. But our solutions, such as salmon hatcheries, were often just as damaging as the problems.
For too long, we have approached fish as an animal that can be farmed like other domesticated animals. For those of you who have seen "Food, Inc.," you know how well that has turned out. While nothing in "Four Fish" is as grotesque as modern-day industrial farming of cows and chickens, in most respects industrial aquaculture has been just as heedless of its consequences. One problem, Greenberg asserts, is that industrial aquaculture is just as out-of-balance as industrial agriculture - we try to designate a certain area for maximizing the production of salmon and salmon only, for example. The result is a delicate yet massive salmon population, remarkably susceptible to being wiped out by a sudden parasite or disease . . . not to mention the environmental and health issues raised by the resulting overabundance of salmon waste hitting a tiny ecosystem.
After reading "Four Fish," you will wonder that we still have any fish at all to eat.
But the good news is that we do, and we also have talented, dedicated people at work trying to solve our modern conundrum - how to preserve and grow wild fish stocks while feeding our insatiable and growing appetite for fish?
Greenberg takes a balanced approach toward finding a solution. Greenberg's basic idea is so simple it is revolutionary: stop trying to fix the fish and fix the farm instead. After all, the fish have survived thousands of years to get to their current state. Perhaps a bit more scrutiny of our farming methods is in order.
Ultimately, Greenberg's optimism (informed, not bright-eyed) distinguishes "Four Fish" from the bevy of anti-consumerist rants out there. Greenberg's book is thoughtful, incisive, and never loses sight of the fact that both humans and fish are involved. All in all, a high-quality read.
2 of 3 people found the above review helpful.
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Give a Man a Fish and He'll Eat For a Day..., July 22, 2010
By Aaron Gutsell (Philadelphia)
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'Four Fish' is a summation of global ocean health, the pressure on fish stocks caused by commercial fishing, and also the progress made in fish farming; all of it based around the book's four title species: salmon, tuna, bass, and cod.
Mr. Greenberg begins with the most commonly farmed fish, salmon, a carnivore that requires net fishing to supply its food, so that salmon farming puts pressure on smaller fish at the base of the food chain like anchovies. In the same chapter Greenberg covers the natural state of salmon and the few remaining free-flowing rivers, the evolution of the species over the past forty million years, and some of the problems generated by intensive aquaculture, such as pollution and disease spreading to wild fish. The author mentions an interesting legacy from the 1800s when thousands of small dams were put up to supply mills that no longer exist, but the dams still stand today, serving no purpose and impeding the salmon run.
Mark Kurlansky's 1998 book 'Cod' was apparently so influential that it ultimately spawned not only this book, but an entire industry of single-named biographies, i.e. 'Salt,' 'Diamond,' and 'Cocaine,' and it is frequently cited in the chapter that covers the ubiquitous fish. Mr. Greenberg clearly shows what kind of environmental damage can be wrought by huge trawlers that literally scrape the bottom clean of life. As a result, U.S. fisheries policies were created that were unique in the world, extending territorial waters out to 200 miles to manage stocks, or more correctly, to prevent over-exploitation, and the U.S. model has been widely adopted, along with off-limits nursery areas, and total fishing bans such as the one that restored the Striped Bass.
Some of the arcane convolutions involved in modern fish farming that the author reveals are quite surprising, and involve tiny polymer capsules inserted into the fish's bloodstream that release timed doses of hormones to induce spawning. These piscine gyrations have been created by market pull, recognized fish 'brands' that have been with us for time immemorial were quite sustainable when there were only a few million mouths to feed, but not today's billions. Now that research is finally catching up with demand, it makes more sense to farm 'newer' fish that can conform to the market, these are vegetarian fish like tilapia that require no supplementary fishing to feed them, and fish that have a good conversion ratio of feed to meat, unlike modern tuna 'farming' that involves catching wild juveniles, penning them, and then feeding them an inefficient netted diet of twenty pounds of fish to produce a pound of marketable flesh. The Australian Barramundi is well suited to closed-system terrestrial farming- that is in tanks on dry land where no disease, pollution, or genes can escape back into the wild- and the Hawaiian Kahala, with a meat similar in texture to tuna that can be farmed without any of the complicated hormone or light manipulations that other species require. The only problem with these species is 'brand name' recognition, and the success of the Patagonian toothfish rebranded as Chilean Sea Bass is a leading example of how to bring the public to a new species (albeit an unsustainably fished one.)
'Four Fish' is an excellent study of wild and farmed fish, conservation, five simple steps for the future, and it is also a personal fishing memoir, as the author begins his story with a childhood spent on the waves, and continues throughout with his adult relationship to the sea.
2 of 4 people found the above review helpful.
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A good read for all fishermen, June 5, 2010
By Jeff (Sonova Beach, FL)
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As an avid recreational fisherman for over 40 years, this book really hits home. Although I am a native Floridian, I enjoyed the efforts put in by the author and his subjects from their varied parts of the world. We, as humans, have over fished even the smallest bodies of water. It's time that someone takes a stand for our future generations.
This book is well written and easy to read. Initially I thought I would need a dictionary, but I plodded through with no issues.
Thanks for the otolith idea. Imagine the looks when I try this my next time dining out!
2 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
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Greenberg comes off all doom and gloom., June 15, 2011
By Writer, traveler, retire.. (Wilsonville OR)
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Four Fish is a comprehensive effort on the part of author Paul Greenberg to call attention to the fact that our voracious appetite for fish is causing havoc. The oceans' fisheries have been devastated, scientific efforts to combat the declining fish population are struggling, and public apathy to an increasing environmental disaster is on the rise. It's not a pretty picture for the fish or those of us who love to catch and eat them.
Greenberg has focused on four of the most popular menu fish - salmon, tuna, bass, and cod - to make his case that healthy and abundant seafood is disappearing. He does so eloquently with strong scientific and anecdotal support. In my part of the country, the Pacific Northwest, the plight of the salmon is daily news. Where are they, when will they get here, why are their numbers falling, and how important are they in our water-crazed mentality are some of the questions uppermost in our minds. Greenberg tries to address our concerns and adds some of his own. I'm even more concerned about salmon, and all fish, after reading his book.
Should fish be farmed or left wild? Salmon are the easiest to be raised like crops, but easy is very misleading. Disease, accidental bastardization of wild fish, chemical pollution of nursery water, feeding difficulties, confinement uncertainties: these are some of the myriad of problems encountered in trying to domesticate fish. Scientists keep working on it because the alternative is so onerous. If the appetite for wild fish continues at the present rate, seafood will disappear from the menu. If you love the taste of fish, Greenberg's accounts of the complexity and uncertainty in trying to augment the natural fishery might well create a feeling of despair.
If salmon are the easiest to farm, then the complexities found in taming most other fish seem insurmountable. We know salmon. We can see and handle their large eggs and their young have a built-in source of nourishment in the yolk that stays with them for a few weeks. Their genomes have been tracked, their families crossed, and their lifestyles extensively studied. All other fish are completely different animals. Most have microscopic eggs and mysterious sexual habits. They are secretive, allergic to human interaction, have many different complex biological structures, and rely on innumerable sources for food. The most optimistic survival rate is a couple of fish out of a million eggs. There is no common denominator between any of them. Many decades of scientific efforts to codify and domesticate these characteristics would be needed to even begin establishing farming techniques. Some procedures have been tried. Most have failed.
Greenberg does a yeoman's job of trying to explain all this. His research is extensive. His sources are recognized experts. He made personal visits to experimental and farming sites. His reasoning and extrapolations are right on point and I enjoyed his personal stories and occasional wit. But somehow, as interested as I am in this problem, I couldn't keep up with all of his heavy scientific droning. I would have rather seen a lighter, more user friendly discourse that offered a more positive outlook. In other words, I was depressed after reading the book because either the outlook is poor or hopeless, or I'm not smart enough to read any bright light into his story.
2 of 5 people found the above review helpful.
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Eye opening..., June 14, 2011
By photo guy (Portland, OR USA)
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I like to eat and catch fish. I am fortunate enough to be able to catch wild and hatchery salmon and steelhead. I've fished for various other fish as well. As a fisherman I considered myself fairly well informed. The author filled large gaps in my knowledge. I was concerned about the state of the fisheries and our management of fish previously. I'm now more concerned.
Some are complaining about this book being a little academic. It's non-fiction - it's supposed to educate and illuminate. It does both. I found it easy to read, interested, and at times it made me shake my head in wonderment at what we (as humans) do to ourselves and our planet. My only issue is the author's mention of intelligent design toward to the end of the book. Thank you for your opinion. I could have done without it.
An excellent book I consider a must-read for anybody concerned about the plant, especially those who like to eat fish.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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Great Resource, June 14, 2011
By Douglas Stuchel (West Warwick, RI, US)
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I enjoyed this book greatly, it was hard to put down at times and I never got to a point in the book where I got bored or wanted to skip ahead. It is somewhat if not plain out easier to eat local when it comes to land based food that is grown in front of us, a place we can see, touch, smell and visit. Fish on the other hand, are not easily visited by most, we cant see schools of fish while driving in a car or while on vacation the fish used to feed the human race on a grand scale is not visible. For the most part we have not domesticated and dwindled down the gene pool of fish as we have beef, pork, chicken, lamb, goat and turkeys. The ocean is still the "wild" frontier for good or for bad the fact that the ocean is still wild means that when humans take, we sometimes don't know when we have taken to much.
As quoted in the book, "Do no harm," the Buddha spoke, "practice restraint according to the fundamental precepts. be moderate in eating...."
[...]
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A Great Book About the Global Fish "Problem" and "Opportunity", May 7, 2011
By Joseph Landes (Seattle, WA)
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Paul Greenberg's book "Four Fish" was named one of the Ny Times 100 Botable Books of 2010 and it is easy to understand why. It is a look at the very important issue of man's relationship with the ocean and specifically four different representative fish: Salmon, Bass, Cod, and Tuna. After reading this book, you will definitely think differently when standing in line at the fish store. That doesn't mean that Greenberg advocates that humankind stop eating fish. It is quite the opposite--he is a fish advocate and has fished and consumed much fish in his lifetime. This book is about much more than that. It is about how fish are bred and caught. It is about creating solutions to enable the long-term viability of fish as a food staple. What I liked about this book is that Greenberg didn't only reveal problems in the fishing industry but also offered solutions: Becoming more efficient in the feeding of fish, ensuring that the right number of fish are caught from the right species, and many other practical solutions. I will say however that I will think twice about eating bluefin tuna after his incredibly detailed account of this fish. By the same token, I will probably eat a lot more talapia. A very good and important book well worth reading.
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A good read; cogent treatment of tangled issues of sustainability, May 2, 2011
By Dennis J. Boccippio (Huntsville, AL United States)
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I received this book as a gift from my brother, a far greater "afishionado" (groan) of all things finned than I. I'll confess it sat idle for a while in the "medium priority" layer of my stack of reading material. It should have been higher.
Fitting comfortably in the "microhistory of a natural resource" new genre of books, "Four Fish" succeeds by drawing together and interweaving compelling personal, historical, economic and ecological narratives. Greenberg tackles difficult and tangled questions of sustainability of the oceans, but leaves readers with enough of a clear narrative and grasp of the issues to begin to form their own, informed, opinions. (This is no easy feat, and one that would have been fumbled by less competent authors).
One of the most interesting (and unexpected) turns is the treatment of aquaculture - domestication of wild species of fish - and its long term viability. The coverage is both balanced and deep. Greenberg also raises uncomfortable but compelling points about the disconnect between Western consumers' faith in the power of the market, vs the realities of firm policy.
Even if you are only glancingly interested in the topic of "things with fins" (as I was) - this book is worth a try.
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A fantastic lens into mankinds most important fish, April 17, 2011
By A. Menon (Hong Kong)
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To me the answer to how much fish is farmed vs caught wild was largely unkown to me before I picked up this book, but now I have a much better idea. In the recent years, books on sustainable farming have been fairly prolofic. Given general environmental concerns the desire to focus attention on bettering our farming techniques on land should be no surprise, but the focus offshore has been generally lacking. Four Fish is an illuminating book on the subject.
The 4 Great fish the author considers are Salmon, Tuna, Bass and Cod. Each a fish with a fine history that is told. The book is split into a chapter on each fish. It starts with Salmon and goes into the history, biology and evolution and the actual salmon industry. It discusses life for the fisherman and it gets into the commercial farming industry. It then goes into Sea Bass and discusses how it came to be farmed and how the industry had challenges in fish infancy that were unique. It describes how the effect of the name bass creates a familiarity that affects consumption preferences. The book then gets into Cod and how it has past his former glory. He then questions the attempt to farm Cod despite its comfort food feel as it is an inefficient fish. The author starts to describe how perhaps replicating old preferences will do us more harm that finding better solutions. The author ends with the most wild of fish, the tuna. One gets a sense of the gradeur of the fish in both real qualities and economic price. One also is given an overview of the near impossibility of farming such a wild and energy using fish.
The book concludes very clearly and sums up the work and discoveries he had made. Given the increasing need for food and constrained space, we need to get more efficient with farming under water. We need to be careful of the ecosystem, but at the same time realize that it can be a useful system to feed people from. We should be farming only those fish which properly balance the risks and rewards. Focusing on farming cod and tuna, who's energy in to energy out ratio's are too high doesnt make any sense and we should look at substitution candidates with better farming qualities. One is presented with a strong case for international recognition of the scarcity and thus need for protection of certain fish. A desire to enlighten the consumer is unrealistic and overfishing should be prevented by legislative cooperation. This is really a great overview of the fishing of some of our great catch. One is given both a great history of the fish as well as a sense of the importance of protecting them rationally.
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4 Reasons to Read "Four Fish", March 26, 2011
By audiobook listener (Etna, NH)
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Reason 1: You loved Kurlansky's Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World, Standage's An Edible History of Humanity and everything by Michael Pollan.
Reason 2: You are fascinated by the fact that the majority of the fish we eat is farmed, and that aquaculture is the fastest growing food production system on the planet.
Reason 3: You are torn about eating seafood. You have heard that seafood populations are collapsing, and that many of the fish we enjoy today will not be available to our children due to overfishing. However, you also hear that we need to eat more seafood for our health, and you think it is a good idea to move away from corn fed beef and towards a more sustainable and health diet that contains more fish.
Reason 4: You like learning about the economics of food, the sociology of food producers, and the psychology of food buyers. You have read Paul Greenberg in the NYTimes magazine and other places, and know that his writing is smart and funny.
What are you reading?
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Brilliant!, March 17, 2011
By janie2498 (Michigan)
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I read a review in the New York Times and was intrigued by author's selection of just four fish to highlight this serious problem. Greenberg takes an incredibly complicated subject "aquaculture" and makes it easily understandable. I think it was significant that he came to the table as a fisherman who witnessed the collapse of a species in his own neighborhood. Thanks for opening my eyes to this sad story!
"Four Fish" is a book everyone on the planet should read. Brilliant!
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And the Future of Our Species?, January 8, 2011
By emergencybooks (New Jersey)
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Brilliantly conceptualized and beautifully written, Paul Greenberg's vision of our past, present, and alternate future relations with what we cavalierly call "seafood" reveals as much about our own possible futures as it does about the possible futures of the inhabitants of the seas around us. Greenberg bravely navigates through troubled and treacherous waters, continually disturbed by conflicts among commercial fishermen, fishing corporations, recreational anglers, environmentalists, nations, and the consumers of wild and farmed fish. Because he himself embodies some of the contradictions between those of us who love to fish, those of us who love to eat fish, and those of us who love the seas, he is able to steer readers on a course that lets us see the realistic choices we can have before us while guiding us away from one-sided arguments that obscure the great difficulties we face in making these choices. Although not everyone will accept his recommendations, we ignore them at our peril, not to mention the peril of what he accurately labels "our last wild food."
FOUR FISH is also both an exciting adventure story--taking us around the world, under the sea, and into the hunt--and a splendid example of interdisciplinary research.
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The way I eat "seafood" is forever changed, December 31, 2010
By Marty A. Michelson (OKC, OK United States)
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I loved this book.
I will never, never, never eat fish (or "seafood") the same way again - in the best way - after reading Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Fish The book combines stories, biography, technology, science, knowledge of aquaculture in so many ways - from global and oceanic issues, to microbial issues in fish - to ethics and profound issues of stewardship and sustainability. I could too easily write too much about this book - so I will trust any interested person to do their own research on the text and what it has to offer elsewhere on the internet - or by reading it yourself! The book was great. I have literally spent many, many extra minutes in the grocery store LOOKING at fish and realizing that "seafood" is way, way, way too generic a term to describe the vast diversity and complexity of fish in their cycles of life to describe "seafood." Wow! I am not sure I will ever eat fish/seafood again - and not remember this book. Great!
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Brain Food, October 28, 2010
By Solvitur ambulando (Helena, Montana, USA)
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So the choices seem to be never eat fish again --because all the wild stocks of salmon, tuna, bass, cod are collapsing or have already collapsed due to impossible fishing pressures-- or focus on farming and eating genetically-modified fish, to the detriment of wild stocks due to possible genetic mixing. Not much of a choice. An important and fascinating book so you can make your own choices about eating fish with clear and informed intent.
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A good introduction to the current status of salmon, sea bass, cod, and tuna, but didn't really seem to develop..., August 21, 2010
By Alan Holyoak (Earth)
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...into the book it could have been. The reason I gave it four stars is that it lacks a fire that could easily be brought to this topic, and it seems to rely heavily on Greenberg's personal experience and not enough on scientific data (though if you dig the references are there) that could support strongly what Greenberg states in his book.
"Four Fish" has an interesting premis, that fish are the last wild food that most of us will eat. Greenberg focuses on outlining the current status of four well-known food fish: salmon, sea bass, cod, and tuna.
As it turns out the majority of the salmon and bass you eat is actually produced via aquaculture. Cod, real cod, has become relatively rare, and fish sold as "cod" are actually related species, some of which are starting to be farmed (aquaculture). The same goes for tuna. Bluefin tuna really is in trouble, and since schools of tuna roam the world's oceans, there is little that can be done to monitor or enforce limits. And, again, most "tuna" are actually smaller related species...the ones that end up in the cans of tuna that most people buy. Did you know that there are fishing companies that net entire schools of tuna, but because they are too small to sell they hold them in huge off-shore nets and feed them until they can harvest them? When do they have a change to reproduce? They don't, and so the overall population drops.
Anyway, I'd say that this book gives a pretty good introduction to what is going on with these fishes, but the telling is not really scientific, and the data and stories told are much to anecdotal for me. Still, for someone who is intersted in the current status of these wild food fish, this is an acceptable introduction. But, it's not nearly as good as "Cod" by Kurlansky.
All in all I recommend this book, but it is not what I'd call a "must read", though many people would benefit from giving this book a look...even if they don't eat much fish.
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On my donation list, August 7, 2010
By 103101FP (United States)
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I got this book from a good friend. As a show of gratitude, I wanted to finish reading the whole book. Originally, I thought that this book would be fun to read since I like fish so much. I really wanted to know more about those specific species, and plus, maybe the author's special personal experiences. However, I already felt disappointed after I finished reading the first several pages.
The author likes to stray into extraneous details that I would say is somewhat off-topic from the main fish featured in that chapter, which really took me a long time to read. For instance, there is one part that talks about sea bass, but in addition to talking about some basic information about this fish, the book mentions about why it is called sea bass, where sea bass comes from, how did early humans choose animals to eat...etc. Each section of this book does the same sort of thing and it really takes away my interest.
As a reader, I want to know the unique parts of those four fish, the unique viewpoints from the author, not something that I can read from the encyclopedia and some research papers. I got through the whole book as gesture of respect to my good friend, but it was a pain to finish it. From my experience I wouldn't recommend this book.
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Fantastic, February 12, 2011
By 1234567
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THis book is fantastic. It shows what the fishing industry is, was, and what it could become. It is also very interesting to hear the point of view of a avid saltwater angler.
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Universty student's will love this, February 3, 2011
By Dylan Jones
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As a university student at the University of British Columbia in environmental sciences I read scholarly, scientific and academic papers non-stop for years on end. I wish they were this interesting. By turning the historical and scientific information he has collected in a personal narrative of his connection with fishing Paul Greenberg has truly written one of the most entertaining, interesting and informative books on aquaculture and human (over)consumption in the last many years.
I was stunned by the fact that during my study breaks from reading I was....reading. I believe Paul Greenberg has attempted to create a book which informs like a university paper but which doesn't invoke the feeling of wanting to drown oneself like university papers tend to do.
I can't really write much more other than if you are interested in the ocean, fishing, aquaculture, historical fact or just a few good stories about big fish you will love this book and it may just help you make a few new decisions the next time you are at a restaurant or supermarket.
Thanks Paul!
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Author as teacher, August 4, 2010
By musician, teacher (Old Greenwich, Ct. USA)
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At several points during "Four Fish", Paul Greenberg's excellent new book about our piscine companions, the author refers to a trailblazing earlier work by Mark Kurlansky called "Cod". That book was an eye-opener with regard to one species of fish and how it was faring under then-current circumstances. Greenberg builds on Kurlansky's book by adding salmon, bass and tuna to the mix and the result is a compendium of information about these creatures that is complex and inspiring.
Paul Greenberg is a terrific teacher. His multi-faceted look at how these fish are surviving includes fish farming, of course, but he delves into the history of why some species have had so much trouble while others are making a comeback. Being a New Englander I couldn't help but take note of how the Connecticut River used to teem with salmon, for instance. He gets into the "economy" of fish... not only the market value but what it takes to feed a fish so that it can feed us. He wisely advises us, however, to look at fish not only as food, but also as integral parts of our animal kingdom.
Who knew that the biggest tuna are warm-blooded? Greenberg has an understated excitement about his writing that makes this narrative flow as easily as the currents in any river or ocean. He offers thoughtful conclusions to his rich work. "Four Fish" is an absorbing book and one that I highly recommend.
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Greenberg comes off all doom and gloom., June 15, 2011
By Author of TIN LIZARD TAL.. (Wilsonville OR)
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Four Fish is a comprehensive effort on the part of author Paul Greenberg to call attention to the fact that our voracious appetite for fish is causing havoc. The oceans' fisheries have been devastated, scientific efforts to combat the declining fish population are struggling, and public apathy to an increasing environmental disaster is on the rise. It's not a pretty picture for the fish or those of us who love to catch and eat them.
Greenberg has focused on four of the most popular menu fish - salmon, tuna, bass, and cod - to make his case that healthy and abundant seafood is disappearing. He does so eloquently with strong scientific and anecdotal support. In my part of the country, the Pacific Northwest, the plight of the salmon is daily news. Where are they, when will they get here, why are their numbers falling, and how important are they in our water-crazed mentality are some of the questions uppermost in our minds. Greenberg tries to address our concerns and adds some of his own. I'm even more concerned about salmon, and all fish, after reading his book.
Should fish be farmed or left wild? Salmon are the easiest to be raised like crops, but easy is very misleading. Disease, accidental bastardization of wild fish, chemical pollution of nursery water, feeding difficulties, confinement uncertainties: these are some of the myriad of problems encountered in trying to domesticate fish. Scientists keep working on it because the alternative is so onerous. If the appetite for wild fish continues at the present rate, seafood will disappear from the menu. If you love the taste of fish, Greenberg's accounts of the complexity and uncertainty in trying to augment the natural fishery might well create a feeling of despair.
If salmon are the easiest to farm, then the complexities found in taming most other fish seem insurmountable. We know salmon. We can see and handle their large eggs and their young have a built-in source of nourishment in the yolk that stays with them for a few weeks. Their genomes have been tracked, their families crossed, and their lifestyles extensively studied. All other fish are completely different animals. Most have microscopic eggs and mysterious sexual habits. They are secretive, allergic to human interaction, have many different complex biological structures, and rely on innumerable sources for food. The most optimistic survival rate is a couple of fish out of a million eggs. There is no common denominator between any of them. Many decades of scientific efforts to codify and domesticate these characteristics would be needed to even begin establishing farming techniques. Some procedures have been tried. Most have failed.
Greenberg does a yeoman's job of trying to explain all this. His research is extensive. His sources are recognized experts. He made personal visits to experimental and farming sites. His reasoning and extrapolations are right on point and I enjoyed his personal stories and occasional wit. But somehow, as interested as I am in this problem, I couldn't keep up with all of his heavy scientific droning. I would have rather seen a lighter, more user friendly discourse that offered a more positive outlook. In other words, I was depressed after reading the book because either the outlook is poor or hopeless, or I'm not smart enough to read any bright light into his story.
1 of 4 people found the above review helpful.
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Four fish is great reading, July 29, 2010
By Lee2010 (Georgia, Usa)
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I purchased the book Four Fish and found it to be great reading. I also read the book "Letusgo-fishing.com" by Lonnie L. Williams and found it to be a winner also. This book is about getting the whole family out of the house and on a fishing trip. I recommend both books.
1 of 6 people found the above review helpful.
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The way I eat "seafood" is forever changed, December 31, 2010
By Marty A. Michelson (OKC, OK United States)
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I loved this book.
I will never, never, never eat fish (or "seafood") the same way again - in the best way - after reading Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Fish The book combines stories, biography, technology, science, knowledge of aquaculture in so many ways - from global and oceanic issues, to microbial issues in fish - to ethics and profound issues of stewardship and sustainability. I could too easily write too much about this book - so I will trust any interested person to do their own research on the text and what it has to offer elsewhere on the internet - or by reading it yourself! The book was great. I have literally spent many, many extra minutes in the grocery store LOOKING at fish and realizing that "seafood" is way, way, way too generic a term to describe the vast diversity and complexity of fish in their cycles of life to describe "seafood." Wow! I am not sure I will ever eat fish/seafood again - and not remember this book. Great!
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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Four fish is great reading, July 29, 2010
By Lee2010 (Georgia, Usa)
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I purchased the book Four Fish and found it to be great reading. I also read the book "Letusgo-fishing.com" by Lonnie L. Williams and found it to be a winner also. This book is about getting the whole family out of the house and on a fishing trip. I recommend both books.
1 of 6 people found the above review helpful.
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Not a fish-eye view, October 1, 2010
By Hande Z (Singapore)
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This is a serious book about a serious subject, or rather, a small aspect of a serious subject - what are we doing to sea life? Greenberg writes with beautiful ease and "Four Fish" is a delight to read. It is full of information about the four fish, especially their characteristics in the wild and how they are being farmed and the effect of that farming on man's taste for fish. It is a book that sets the mind thinking; deeply and anxiously. So by those counts this should be a four or five star book. Ultimately, Greenberg has a message for his readers, but that message is at once obscured and blurred by his focus on four fish when the focus must be on the entire sea, that is life itself. This is not a personal fault of the book or the author and I am making this point to draw attention to the bigger picture and the bigger problem. We need to know about the squids, and the anchovies, and the threadfins, and the soles; and how can we go on if the population of the world is not reduced? Since it was this book that led me to think of these things, I think the fourth star should be given - one for each fish.
1 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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Four Fish Will Hook You, September 8, 2010
By Michael Goodell (Detroit)
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When I visited my local market after reading Paul Greenberg's "Four Fish," I found myself looking at the salmon, tuna and white fish at the fish counter through different eyes. One of the revelations from the book is that very little of the fish we eat today is truly wild. Most of it is farmed. Much of it has been genetically modified, and little of it tastes the way fish used to taste.
Greenberg grew up seeking and finding solace in the act of fishing. As a youth he schooled himself in the piscine world of the Long Island Sound. Though he drifted away from the art of fishing, around the time he discovered girls, he admits, it remained part of his life, and later, he found sustenance and spiritual rebirth in the practice. In that sense, he wrote this book from inside the world of fish, almost as if he were in the water, staring at the fish hook.
Part travelogue, part naturalist text, "Four Fish" is that rare achievement, a work which is both entertaining and informative. Greenberg takes his readers around the world, and introduces us to a cast of wide-ranging individuals, each different in his or her own right, and each skillfully defined through Greenberg's word portraits. Yet for all their differences, what each of those characters shares is a passion for fish. For the growing, the harvesting, the improvement and the preservation of fish.
The author waxes poetic on the subject of what is clearly his favorite fish, the bluefin tuna. After reading his arguments in favor of elevating that noble fish to the same untouchable status as the whale, the porpoise and the dolphin, it is hard to argue with him. Yet, at the same time, Greenberg admits to the thrill he experienced while catching one. That is another of the pleasures of this book.
Though it is impossible to write a book like this without acknowledging the reality of human impact on the environment, Greenberg doesn't dwell on it. He concedes that we have done a great deal of damage to the ocean and most of its species, but responds by seeking methods in which we can all coexist. He is not a scold, and frankly, that makes it more likely he will be heard.
1 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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Eye opening..., June 14, 2011
By D. Richardson (Seattle, WA)
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I like to eat and catch fish. I am fortunate enough to be able to catch wild and hatchery salmon and steelhead. I've fished for various other fish as well. As a fisherman I considered myself fairly well informed. The author filled large gaps in my knowledge. I was concerned about the state of the fisheries and our management of fish previously. I'm now more concerned.
Some are complaining about this book being a little academic. It's non-fiction - it's supposed to educate and illuminate. It does both. I found it easy to read, interesting, and at times it made me shake my head in wonderment at what we (as humans) do to ourselves and our planet. My only issue is the author's mention of intelligent design toward to the end of the book. Thank you for your opinion. I could have done without it.
An excellent book I consider a must-read for anybody concerned about fish and the oceans, and even for those who just like to eat fish.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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The way I eat "seafood" is forever changed, December 31, 2010
By ~ marty alan michelson, p.. (OKC, OK United States)
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I loved this book.
I will never, never, never eat fish (or "seafood") the same way again - in the best way - after reading Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Fish The book combines stories, biography, technology, science, knowledge of aquaculture in so many ways - from global and oceanic issues, to microbial issues in fish - to ethics and profound issues of stewardship and sustainability. I could too easily write too much about this book - so I will trust any interested person to do their own research on the text and what it has to offer elsewhere on the internet - or by reading it yourself! The book was great. I have literally spent many, many extra minutes in the grocery store LOOKING at fish and realizing that "seafood" is way, way, way too generic a term to describe the vast diversity and complexity of fish in their cycles of life to describe "seafood." Wow! I am not sure I will ever eat fish/seafood again - and not remember this book. Great!
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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A must read for fish eaters, September 30, 2010
By bmass34
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Well written and an entertaining read. Greenberg makes learning about these 4 species and their associated issues easy and worthwhile. Without standing on a soapbox, he depicts each species' troubles and then provides information consumers can use in order to eat fish more sustainably.
1 of 2 people found the above review helpful.
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A compelling assessment of dangers and preservation needs, December 9, 2010
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA)
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Paul Greenberg's FOUR FISH: THE FUTURE OF THE LAST WILD FOOD receives Christopher Lane's seasoned voice as it explores the state of our ocean and the perils of overfishing. Fish are the last wild food - and they may soon be gone. This provides a compelling assessment of dangers and preservation needs.
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Contaminated Fish, July 3, 2010
By EnergyWork (SGV, CA)
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Four Fish is divided up into four main chapters with Salmon, Bass, Cod, and Tuna headlining each chapter. Subjects discussed by Greenberg for the Salmon section include the Kwik Pak Fishing Company, Norwegian Breeders, PCB Contamination, Salmon Aquaculture, and Aquabounty's DNA manipulation of Salmon.
With Bass, Greenberg analyzes Sea Bass terminology, different regions such as the Mediterranean and Israel with their affect on the Bass population, 19th century intellectual Francis Galton's 5 qualities for domestication as applied to Sea Bass, and mail-order marketer Harold von Braunhut(inventor of the Sea-monkeys).
For Cod, Greenberg goes delves into his fishing trip at Sheepsheadbay, Brooklyn, Cod as industrial fish, McDonald's use of Cod, a taste test with Cod author Mark Kurlansky(between Shetland Organic, Whole Foods Wild Caught, and Norwegian Conventionally Caught Cod), and he veers into Tilapia and Tra.
Lastly Tuna, Greenberg explores his Tuna fishing trip on the Explorer, Japan's introduction to Tuna popularity in the 70's, physical qualities of the tuna, Bluefin's popularity, and he also goes into Whale and Swordfish conservation.
The immense amount of detail/information I found extremely boring. I could care less that in "France and Holland the rotifer was perfected as early sea-bass food"(p 101) or "the fact that 'cetaceans' were not fish was well established within the scientific community by the end of the eighteenth century"(p 194). Yawn.
I felt like I was reading some hybrid science/history textbook with an overload of technical information. The only part I found useful and interesting was the vast amount of pollution contained within many of these fishes. PCB's initially used in electrical equipment but banned by the 70's and heavy metals such as Chromium still linger in these fishes. Scary.
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more than four fish, July 8, 2011
By Elaine C. Erb (Niwot, CO USA)
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This is a very well written look at four of the major commercial fish. Greenberg expands the discussion beyond these main fish to look at other fish that are crucial to healthy aquatic ecosystems. What a great reminder that no fish can live independently but are but one component in the marine environment.
As an avid fisherman, Greenberg paints a broad spectrum of what works and what doesn't in our management of fisheries. He asks the right questions about whether culinary fish should be farmed or wild and who should be overseeing fishing quotas. Greenberg looks at fish from a variety of perspectives, including the people trying to make aquaculture work effectively.
I read a lot about fish and marine environments as I believe that healthy fisheries are an integral part of planetary health. Greenberg's book is full of great information presented in an interesting, very readable manner.
Fans of Michael Pollan should read this.
0 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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Do You Know Your Fish?, September 17, 2011
By Tsukiji Fishmonger's Wife (Tokyo, Japan)
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As a fisherman I was immediately into this book as I could see the author's passion for fishing. Married to a fishmonger I am also emotionally invested in the future of fish in the world. This book is well researched, documented, and highlights many issues that I never knew existed.
Four Fish is a must read for anyone who is truly concerned about seafood and its future.
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Farmed vs. wild-get the facts and decide, September 14, 2011
By Vermeer fan (Atlanta, GA)
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Having been born by the sea and after observing the farmed salmon pens in New Brunswick, Canada firsthand, I was interested in learning more about the fish that have been turned to in order to feed the mouths and stomachs of contemporary humans. This book highlighted those fish that may have started "wild" but were in turn, domesticated and tinkered with to fill the needs of the scientists and entrepreneurs that raised them in pens, ponds and tanks.
A chapter or more is dedicated to each one: salmon, cod, sea bass and tuna. You get some general history and anecdote of the scientists and fishermen who interacted with the animals including the author's own. Alternately visionaries, scoundrels and dedicated marine scientists help illuminate our own sometimes blind eye to what we're doing to the environment and fellow creatures. They are all skillfully interwoven to help tell a tale of what still might be done to forestall the loss of future environment and our own culinary treats-to-be.
This book will make you think twice before downing that bite of bluefin tuna. Instead fire off a letter to your Congressman and get the tilipa at the grocery store or restaurant.
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Acurate and entertaining, August 31, 2011
By fishman
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I bought this book a few months ago in hard cover. It was worth the money. As a former commercial fisherman i found this book to be both acurate and entertaining. It is well thought out and while written with a enviromental stand point it does show both sides. I do believe if you are going to err error om the side of preservation.
0 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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Easy Read on the Predicament of Seafood (Fish), August 22, 2011
By Aaron K. Adkins (Houston, TX USA)
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As a sportfisherman and member of the conservation organization The Billfish Foundation, I regularly read here and there about conservation efforts for ocean game fish. Interested, I was looking for something more in depth, and I picked up this book.
I enjoyed the book and find it to be informative. It is easy to read. The author is a sometimes sportfisherman himself, and his stories keep the information flow interesting. The book focuses on four wild fish: salmon, sea bass, cod and bluefin tuna. The author explains the present, past and possible futures for each.
Sadly, the future is grim, although the author offers ideas and suggestions. But if there is any hope for conservation, the masses including myself, need to read books such as this and become informed. The subject especially requires one to become informed because each fish has a different story or set of circumstances. If you are interested in this subject, I recommend this book.
0 of 1 people found the above review helpful.
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Four Fish, FIve Stars, January 14, 2012
By uncle (San Francisco, CA United States)
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Four fish species, four archetype stories, four stories of exploitation and possible disaster, but also four stories that are fueled by hope and possibilities. Four Fish shares the author's passion for fishing, blending it with hard research and augmenting those facts with interesting anecdotal experiences. An easy, informative read and possibly a life changing read. I certainly will adapt my market and restaurant choices because of this well written book.
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A good read, January 9, 2012
By J. lennon (philly)
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Anyone who has enjoyed the work of John McPhee over the years will like this discussion of the sea, it's occupants and the way we relate to them. It makes your next dinner out a bit more interesting too.
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An obvious affection for fish, October 30, 2011
By Philip Bauerle
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In every page there is evidence of Greenberg's childhood passion for fish and fishing. Each of the four fish encompasses a different aspect of modern day aquaculture and the relationship humans have with the oceans. While each chapter focuses on one fish the formula is the same: The life history of the fish, how the fish fits into the human menu (the author even fishes for them himself), how humans have begun to transform this fish into a farmable animal, and finally ends each chapter with a pros/cons wrap-up of human interaction with the fish species. Greenberg leaves the reader with a charge of action at the end of the book with ideas for the future of aquaculture and sustainable human food. Overall, Four Fish is an excellent book which covers a broad spectrum of the aspects about the "last wild food" which will appeal to many types of readers.
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fish tale, October 15, 2011
By J. schulman (mid-west)
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really enjoyed ---interesting facts about the world of fish---too bad most of the people and companies that abuse the world's oceans will never read this book--becoming a vegan was a thought throughout--
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Great Fish Stories, Could Have Used a More Careful Filleting, September 27, 2010
By Miranda Gaea (Missoula, Montana)
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This book covers a tasty topic and is easy to wade into. Although it doesn't go into the depths, it's clear the writer has seen a lot along the coastal waters where he is comfortable. The accounts he gives of his own experiences as an ocean predator are interspersed neatly into his narratives about the fates of each of his four classes of fish. But the book could have been even better with some further sentence-by-sentence editing to eliminate repetitions, and deeper explanations of the science involved in resurrecting extirpated populations.
Still, this is worth the bite.
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Interesting, September 2, 2010
By Dr Adam Weiss (Buffalo Grove,IL.)
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Interesting read as author Greenberg elaborates on the four common fish source for humans done on throughout the world and how we must change the way we fish and farm raise these species if we want to consume them in the very short period of time before the seas and oceans are fished out.Readers will learn about salmon the mighty tuna and sea bass and cold water cod and how each at one time plentiful , now few appear on a regular basis in some parts of the world.
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