![]() ![]() And she loves that they so succinctly, and often quite beautifully, make their points and - in the book - help her make her own.Īssembling the most poignant pencil drawings, however, took quite some doing. Nestle firmly believes that cartoonists get it. “Because food is such an intense focus of public discussion and connects to some of the most important issues facing societies today - and because the food industry acts in its own self-interest and government agencies act inconsistently - political cartoonists have plenty of material to work with,” Nestle writes of the wealth of material human consumption habits present to trained observers. In “Eat Drink Vote,” Nestle does just that, shining a light on the ink-stained satirists who so cleverly skewer society’s obsession with our most basic of needs: food. ![]() ![]() For her latest incursion into the dizzying world of food politics, award-winning author and public health advocate Marion Nestle didn’t so much have to choose her words wisely as draw from the flood of animated commentary already flowing through the daily news cycle. ![]()
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