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If you had to kill it yourself, if you had to look it in the eye . . . would you eat it?
Louise's first kill is a disaster. She injures a rabbit, and thinks it has died in agony. But the experience teaches her a lesson, and when she subsequently finds the rabbit, she vows to do its death justice by finding out what it really means to kill and eat animals.
Many people claim to care about the meat that they eat, but do they really know how the animal died? The Ethical Carnivore addresses this universal question, through an emotional personal quest. Taking the current fashion for "ethical meat" to its logical conclusion, Louise vows to eat only animals she has killed herself for a year.
Starting small, Louise shoots and traps game such as hare and squirrels, and learns how to skin and cook them. She builds a new appreciation of the British countryside, and its wild fish and animals.
The narrative moves to domestic animals. Louise sees cows in the slaughterhouse; by talking to the men and women who work there, she finds out how the animals are killed and the effect it has on the people who do it on our behalf.
At the end of her journey, Louise goes wildfowling in the Orkneys to shoot a goose for Christmas dinner. She reflects that the rabbit with the white blaze has taught her to appreciate meat by facing up to the death of animals and to look deeply at her own morals and values.
Published | Jan 02 2018 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 320 |
ISBN | 9781472933102 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Natural History |
Illustrations | 18 black and white artworks |
Dimensions | 198 x 129 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
A charming and eye-opening book.
The Guardian
The author more than earns her stripes... It's impossible not to admire her.
The Evening Standard
This humane, adventurous and wonderfully illuminating exploration will entertain and challenge everyone, from carnivore to vegan.
Patrick Barkham
Vivid, visceral and honest. Gray observes without ever being detached, and that's a rare talent.
Ella Risbridger
Compellingly readable, wise and kind. There's plenty of serious reflection too, all the more arresting for Gray's lightness of touch.
Charles Foster
A thorough, engaging, sometimes shocking account of where our meat comes from. It is also, importantly, a book about caring.
Malachy Tallack, Caught by the River
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