James Gorman:
There's a lot to learn in Craving Earth.
Completely original, well-written, wide-net book about the craving for and ingesting of non foods, known as pica.
Brilliant and very readable.
Peter W. Abrahams:
Highly recommended for reading by both interested academics and nonspecialists.
The work serves a very important purpose.
Accessible.
Jeremy MacClancy:
A concise, critical summary of what we do and don't know about eating earth, grounded in an exhaustive search for relevant literature and [Young's] own fieldwork in Zanzibar.
Deborah L. Crooks:
Accessible and engaging. A valuable teaching tool... and a fascinating and well-told story.
Adam Kirsch:
Quirkily informative.
Gretel H. Pelto, Cornell University:
Fascinating! With wit and keen scientific insight, Sera L. Young has written the landmark study of pica. It is sure to be a classic in anthropology and nutrition for a long time to come.
Carole Browner, University of California, Los Angeles, and author of Neurogenetic Diagnoses: The Power of Hope and the Limits of Today's Medicine:
Young writes like a dream. This masterful work draws upon data, insights, and perspectives from anthropology, history, public health, nutrition, and medicine to offer fascinating answers. A book you'll never forget!
Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, University of California, Davis:
A fascinating romp through the history of pica, an eye-opener for the geophagist, and an elegant piece of quantitative evolutionary analysis. Young has produced an engaging, fast-moving text anchored to rich appendices that document pica in history and literature, its prevalence across human populations and subpopulations, and its association with micronutrient deficiencies.
David L. Browman, Washington University in St. Louis:
The human focus of Young's book provides a welcome counterpoint to the strictly medical focus currently available.
Michael Latham, Cornell University, named Living Legend in Nutrition by the Congress of Nutrition:
This marvelous book takes the reader on a fascinating historical, literary, and scientific safari. Craving Earth is surely the most in-depth, revealing, and readable publication ever undertaken on geophagia and other aspects of pica. A must read for experts, while also a most enjoyable read for anyone else.
Lenore Manderson, Monash University, Australia, and editor, Medical Anthropology:
Craving Earth is compelling, encyclopedic, and distinctively quirky-an engaging account of eating, soil chemistry, history, religion, ethnography, nutrition, and the social media. It is a book to inspire students and capture the imagination of any reader of the mysteries of geophagia and the idiosyncracies of social life.
Mary Roach, author of Stiff and Packing for Mars:
Sera L. Young combines a detective's intuition, a scholar's diligence, and her own joyful, indefatigable curiosity to unravel one of the oldest and oddest of human mysteries. I devoured this book like an amylophage on a laundry starch bender.
Peter Ellison, Harvard University and editor-in-chief, American Journal of Human Biology:
Young brings a fascinating story from the musty cupboard of old wives' tales into the bright light of science. With fluid prose, a storyteller's style, and a restless curiosity, she peels back the surface of a seemingly bizarre and idiosyncratic behavior to produce a marvelous study of social biology with global reach. This is a book that will entertain as it educates, and it will educate everyone who reads it.