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509 ratings, 3.80 average rating, 88 reviews
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published
March 10th 2003
by Viking Adult
binding
Hardcover, 432 pages
isbn
0670030910
(isbn13: 9780670030910)
description
The three clans at once enabling and torturing each other in Ruth Ozeki's All Over Creation--the central Fuller family, the neighboring Quinns,...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 635)
Man alone of all Nature’s children thinks of himself as the center about which his world, little or large, revolves, but if he persists in this hallucination he is certain to receive a shock that will waken him or else he will come to grief in the end. –Luther Burbank, The Harvest of the Years
Ozeki’s second food-themed novel is just as rich and fulfilling as the first. The characters come together via food, specifically genetically altered food, and are a colorful palatte: Yumi, comm...more
Ozeki’s second food-themed novel is just as rich and fulfilling as the first. The characters come together via food, specifically genetically altered food, and are a colorful palatte: Yumi, comm...more
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bookshelves:
culture-race,
dying,
environmental,
fiction,
food,
old-age
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
people who like barbara kingsolver
There are many elements of this book that remind me of Barbara Kingsolver, in all of the good ways. Similar to Poisonwood Bible, there are the shifting points of view that make a story that much more interesting. What I like best when an author does that was present in this story - sometimes you get to be in their heads and sometimes you just have to be satisfied with watching them go through it. The environmental bent is always a risky thing to take on. Are you going to be preaching to the ...more
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Read in November, 2008
I'm glad I only listened to this, otherwise, I may not have finished it. I kept thinking it would improve, but it was just okay. The main character runs away from home as a teen and returns a lifetime later to help care for her dying father. She brings the issues she left with at 14 along with 3 children she raises poorly. As a sub-plot is a group of environmentalists who joins her family on their farm in Idaho. They help in the care of the aging parents but also enlighten the reader and the nei...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
hippies, flower children, vegans, vegetarians, people who love Ruth Ozeki
I'd forgotten how much I loved Ozeki's writing. The small type face in this particular copy were overwhelming at first, and I thought for certain it would take me a lot longer to read it. But I finished in just 2 days and couldn't put it down. Of course it's still rife with Ozeki's patent activism, and a lot of heart-felt moments. Like Ozeki's more well-known book My Year of Meats, this one had parts which made me cry.
The interact...more
The interact...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
emerging environmentalists
“Maybe that was the trick – to accept the responsibility and forgo the control. To love without expectation?” p. 410
Meet Yumi Fuller, whose aging parents Lloyd and Momoko run a seed propagation business on what used to be the family’s gigantic potato farm. Cass and Will Quinn are their lifetime neighbors who have taken over most of the acreage and all of the potato farming from the Fullers. Then there’s the Seeds of Revolution, a hippyish environmental activist group who...more
Meet Yumi Fuller, whose aging parents Lloyd and Momoko run a seed propagation business on what used to be the family’s gigantic potato farm. Cass and Will Quinn are their lifetime neighbors who have taken over most of the acreage and all of the potato farming from the Fullers. Then there’s the Seeds of Revolution, a hippyish environmental activist group who...more
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bookshelves:
didatic-fiction
Read in March, 2008
I had forgotten about Ozeki until this February in Portland, Maine, when _My Year of Meats_ came up in conversation and my host asked if I had read this one; I looked around a bit for it, didn't find it in my local bookstores, and forgot about it again until I was it in Powells up in Portland, Oregon.
While not as laugh-out-loud funny and satirical as _My Year of Meats_, _All Over Creation_ is a much better book. The characters are better developed (though in the other book's defense, it wa...more
While not as laugh-out-loud funny and satirical as _My Year of Meats_, _All Over Creation_ is a much better book. The characters are better developed (though in the other book's defense, it wa...more
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bookshelves:
green
Read in October, 2008
recommended to Tamara by:
Peggy
Didn't quite live up to my expectations, but still very good. It's always a hard balance when fiction is trying to push a political agenda. Truly, my main issues were the complete lack of reality regarding how the characters lives converge.
Favorite Quotes:
Yummy's life was just so different from any she knew and she wanted to tell Will all about it. She wanted to talk and puzzle it out. It was a pity he wasn't interested...It wasn't gossip. It was life, and it had been a long time since...more
Favorite Quotes:
Yummy's life was just so different from any she knew and she wanted to tell Will all about it. She wanted to talk and puzzle it out. It was a pity he wasn't interested...It wasn't gossip. It was life, and it had been a long time since...more
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Read in April, 2005
recommends it for:
activists
At 15, Yumi leaves her family home/farm in Idaho wanting to get away from what she perceived as narrow-minded, right-wing parents. She decided to raise her children in the most liberated way she possibly could and has to justify her parenting when she goes back home to help her parents with their heirloom seed mail-order company.
At the same time, a group of travelling eco-activists make camp at the family home to help out with the seed company, deciding that it and Yumi's parents are at the...more
At the same time, a group of travelling eco-activists make camp at the family home to help out with the seed company, deciding that it and Yumi's parents are at the...more
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bookshelves:
environmentalism,
fiction
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
Barbara Kinslver fans, environmentalists, coming of age novel fans
I stumbled upon Ozeki's My Year Of Meats, and thought it was one of the most beautiful surprises of 2006's reading list. This novel is again heavy with environmental awareness themes, but it doesn't get preachy. Her fiction reads like a memoir, and her characters are so deep and so complex that you feel like you know them by book's end. The hippies/social activists in their Winnebago, the old heirloom seed farmers on the homestead, the rebellious girl who ran away, the child returning to her age...more
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bookshelves:
familyrelationships,
nikkei
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in January, 2008
this book is fun, but not very deep. i was looking for a quick read and i found it in this 400+ page "modern epic." i guess my beef with this book, and with ozeki's other book my year of meats is that there aren't any convincing non-white, non-asian characters, and that she hyper-exoticizes hapa (biracial/multiracial in general) women. the white and asian people are very believable tho, and i was really impressed by all the research she must have done.
the hippies in the book were su...more
the hippies in the book were su...more
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Got the book because it was set in Idaho. I liked the book, but disliked the main character. For me the secondary characters were much more likable, inviting and understandable.Some fun references to locales near home and some pretty entertaining activities - entertaining, not necessarily probable.
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bookshelves:
fiction,
food,
funny
Read in March, 2005
recommends it for:
foodies and other smart people
The first couple of pages of this book are among my favorite openers ever. Ruth Ozeki is brilliant and just incredibly funny. Even though I think the ending of the book is a little pat, I still consider the book as a whole one of the most amazing I've read -- I'm only harsh on the end because I so, so loved the first hundred pages that I was sure I was going to laugh and cry my way through until the triumphant end, when I could put it down and say with deep satisfaction that this was the ...more
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I haven't read My Year of Meats, so can't compare to her other work. This book rotates through characters all connected through the farming of potatoes. Of course, the author's theme is that genetically engineered food is bad. That seems a given, and sometimes it seemed as if she was preaching to the choir. I would have also loved more character development Will, the good hearted potato farmer, who was trying the "bad" potatoes. He seemed like a good guy; more of his side of the s...more
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Read in June, 2008
Overall a good book. The storyline was engaging, the cast of characters was diverse, and the environmentalist sub-story was intriguing. If you enjoy discussions of food ethics, go for it. If you tend to stay away from anything remotely preachy, especially when it comes to organic food and vegetarianism, then this book probably isn't for you. The one downside to this book that I found was that the main character was really annoying, and I kept finding myself wanting to smack her upside the head. ...more
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Read in October, 2005
10/24/05 #187
TITLE/AUTHOR: All Over Creation by Ruth Ozeki
RATING: 4.5/B+
GENRE/PUB DATE/# OF PGS: Fiction, 2003, 417 pgs
COMMENTS: Yumi Fuller grew up in Liberty Falls, Idaho on a potato farm. She leaves home at 15 and after 3 children by different fathers she returns home 25 yrs later to visit her ailing parents. She reunites w/ her best friend from childhood, confronts a boyfriend from the past and gets caught up w/ an activist group -- the Seeds of Resistance. This group travels the cou...more
TITLE/AUTHOR: All Over Creation by Ruth Ozeki
RATING: 4.5/B+
GENRE/PUB DATE/# OF PGS: Fiction, 2003, 417 pgs
COMMENTS: Yumi Fuller grew up in Liberty Falls, Idaho on a potato farm. She leaves home at 15 and after 3 children by different fathers she returns home 25 yrs later to visit her ailing parents. She reunites w/ her best friend from childhood, confronts a boyfriend from the past and gets caught up w/ an activist group -- the Seeds of Resistance. This group travels the cou...more
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The characters in All Over Creation are mostly exaggerated and have little depth. However, Ruth Ozeki aptly writes nuanced descriptions of white anarchist and working class rural communities, creating believable stereotypes which members of a community may hold about other members of a community. Oversimplified example: one farmer may think that there are "certain kinds of farmers" (present in this book) and stereotypes non-farmers hold of farmers (present in small amounts in this book...more
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bookshelves:
fiction,
socialissues
Read in August, 2007
Such a wild ride!
Ozeki is amazing at creating convincing characters from wildly different experiences and somehow intertwining their lives. From old to young, from radical social to conservative Christian, the characters' lives come together and show how people can connect across differences.
She weaves her knowledge of GMO foods and agribusiness throughout the novel to bring awareness of this global issue, yet also brings in thought-provoking relationships that dig deep into our notions ...more
Ozeki is amazing at creating convincing characters from wildly different experiences and somehow intertwining their lives. From old to young, from radical social to conservative Christian, the characters' lives come together and show how people can connect across differences.
She weaves her knowledge of GMO foods and agribusiness throughout the novel to bring awareness of this global issue, yet also brings in thought-provoking relationships that dig deep into our notions ...more
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Read in January, 2005
It keeps with my tradition of reading books about farming and farmers and farming communities; I definitely enjoyed it. As another review mentioned, it totally reminds me of that Barbara Kingsolver story of the tobacco farmers. I liked the juxtaposition of the old school farming community's concern for the land and the new school, anarchist view of the land. They aren't necessarily mutually exclusive and one would hope that a partnership can be formed to help save the world one farm at a time...more
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Read in January, 2007
'all over creation' wasn't quite as good as 'my year of meats'; i wasn't able to connect with any of the characters as much. i enjoyed reading it just the same, it just didn't give me the same feeling of intense curiosity about what was going to happen to everyone in the book. Ozeki was able to represent both sides of a fairly complex issue (genetic manipulation of produce) with compassion and intelligence; i came away feeling i had a better understanding of the issue.
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in April, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone interested in fiction with an environmental bent
"All Over Creation" is not as adept or powerful as Ozeki's fine, earlier novel, "My Year of Meats," but it's entertaining and intellectually provocative. The novel's main flaw--flat, weak, characterization--is reasonably offset by its intricate plotting and substrate of rich ideas. It's worth reading if you like to think about how activism, environmental protection, and the passionate efforts of people dedicated to important social causes could, potentially, play out.
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