A New Farm Language
Subtitle: How a sharecropper's son discovered a world of talking plants, smart insects, and natural solutions
Includes an introduction by John Ikerd and a foreword by Mark Schatzker.
Joe Lewis grew up poor on a Mississippi cotton farm without electricity or running water. And yet it was a rich life — one lived in close proximity to family and nature. Because of a childhood spent around mules, chickens and insects of every kind, Lewis developed a deep and abiding curiosity for the creatures of the natural world. That led him on a trajectory to become an award-winning entomologist with the USDA-ARS at the Tifton Campus, University of Georgia.
During his 40-year career, Lewis discovered how plants use “SOS” signals to recruit beneficial insects to their defense. In 2008, he was awarded the coveted Wolf Prize in Agriculture for this groundbreaking work. In his new book, Lewis looks back on his charmed childhood and distinguished scientific career while tracing our industrialized country’s increasing alienation from nature.
Lewis believes we can reconnect with nature through learning to speak a new language of co-existence and cooperation — both in our agriculture and our everyday lives. This coming-of-age tale will inspire anyone interested in agriculture, talking plants and smart insects.
Includes a foreword by Mark Schatzker. Preface by John Ikerd.
WATCH THE REPLAY of a free evening with authors Joe Lewis and John Ikerd and farmer Alton Walker recorded on March 31, 2021, to officially launch the latest book from Acres U.S.A.!
“If I am saying nothing else here, I am saying that our disconnect from nature—her beauty, her power, her amazing ability to give— is, more than anything, the greatest threat to our survival.” — W. Joe Lewis, author
"Joe Lewis’ book is not an ordinary book about a scientific discovery; it is a unique and important book about nature and the nature of life.” — John Ikerd, author of Sustainable Capitalism, A Return to Common Sense, and Small Farms are Real Farms
Copyright 2021 • Softcover • 218 pages
About the Author
Dr. W. Joe Lewis is an award winning scientist, recognized worldwide for major crosscutting discoveries in the fundamental science of pest management. The models for his studies have been behavioral and chemical interactions of parasitoids, insect herbivores, and plants, along with ecosystem principles. The impact of his research is evidenced by over 200 refereed scientific publications and book chapters, including five papers in prestigious journals of Nature and Science, and three in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and an invitational paper in Scientific American. His work has been highlighted extensively in the popular press, including CNN Science and Technology, BBC/ Discovery Channel, Business Week, National Public Radio and BBC Wildlife, Fortune Magazine, and NBC Today Show.
He grew up as a sharecropper’s son in south Mississippi, later earning a Ph.D. degree from Mississippi State University at 24 years of age. From 1967 until his retirement in 2006, he was a research entomologist in the USDA, ARS, Tifton, Georgia. with joint faculty appointments with the University of Georgia and University of Florida. He served as an elected member of the City Council and Vice-Mayor of the City of Tifton, Georgia, for 16 years. He is married (wife, Beth) with two children and four grandchildren. He currently is President and Owner, Creative Initiatives, LLC, implementing a range of research and educational programs in cooperation with school systems, local and state governments toward school improvement and sustainable communities.
Capstoned by the 2008 world renowned Wolf Prize in Agriculture, personally presented in Jerusalem by Israeli President, Shimon Peres, Dr. Lewis’s numerous honors and awards include: the prestigious Founder's Memorial Lecturer Award by the Entomological Society of America; Honorary Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley; the E. T. York Distinguished Lecturer, Auburn University; the C. P. Alexander Distinguished Lecturer, University of Massachusetts; named U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agriculture Research Service Outstanding Scientist of the Year; received Special Congressional Recognition for Outstanding Achievement, Service and Public Distinction; decorated internationally by the Jean-Marie Delwart Foundation Award and Prize (conferred in Brussels, in conjunction with the Royal Academy of Sciences of Belgium); and an Invitational Fellowship for Research by the Japan Society for Promotion of Science. He was recently honored during an on-campus ceremony as a Distinguished Fellow by the Mississippi State University, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
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