
audiobook
by Cyril G. (Cyril George) Hopkins
The narrative opens with a college‑trained agronomist, Percy Johnston, arriving at a modest Southern estate in the early autumn of 1903. He is welcomed by a warm, multigenerational family whose connection to the land frames a lively portrait of rural life. As he walks the fields of Westover, the reader is drawn into a detailed picture of the soil, its textures, and the subtle clues it gives about past cultivation.
Beyond the personal encounters, the author weaves rigorous scientific observation into everyday scenes, explaining how soil composition, organic matter, and climate shape crop productivity. The book traces the legacy of a family’s 40‑acre parcel in the corn belt, illustrating the broader challenges of maintaining fertility across different regions. Listeners will come away with a clear sense of how practical knowledge and historical context combine to inform modern, sustainable agriculture.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (541K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1866–1919
An American agricultural chemist remembered for practical, plainspoken writing about soils and crop fertility, he helped shape modern ideas about sustainable farming in the Midwest. His work connected laboratory science with the everyday needs of farmers.
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