
audiobook
by F. H. (Franklin Hiram) King
In this vivid account, a diligent observer journeys across China, Korea and Japan to uncover how centuries‑old farming communities have managed to feed massive populations on modest plots of land. The narrative blends careful scientific measurement with vivid descriptions of terraced fields, intricate irrigation networks, and the everyday lives of the peasants who tend them. Readers gain insight into the ways these societies preserve soil fertility, reuse waste, and integrate crops such as rice, tea and silk into a sustainable agricultural system.
The author’s perspective, shaped by early‑20th‑century Western assumptions about agriculture, highlights both the stark contrasts and surprising commonalities between Eastern and American farming practices. By documenting everything from the mechanics of canalisation to the cultural customs surrounding harvests, the work offers a rich, comparative look at how resource‑conscious techniques have endured for millennia. It invites modern listeners to reconsider what “permanent agriculture” might mean in today’s world.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (530K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1848–1911
Best known for bringing practical science to the farm, this pioneering American agricultural scientist helped reshape dairy and soil work in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is also remembered for Farmers of Forty Centuries, a book that stayed influential long after his death.
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by J. W. (John William) Robertson Scott