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Reviews for Allez, viens!

 Allez magazine reviews

The average rating for Allez, viens! based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2015-07-13 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Kevin Waterman
This book was decent. I was disappointed that I didn't realize that it was published in Arizona and mainly addressed plants of the Southwestern United States when I'm currently living in Alaska. I did learn a little bit about some plants up here and found out that some plants that I eat are actually poisonous in larger quantities. Interesting. Some of those poisonous plants are the exact type that I would be eating in a survival situation, so it's good to know which are which.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-02-07 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Shannon Wagnon
"This is a toxic alkaloid. And so is this. And so is this." Super fascinating subject, but there has to be some kind of better way of talking about poisonous plants than just listing all of them in alphabetic order. I would have enjoyed more general discussion about the evolutionary role of toxins and the phylogenetic relationships between different poisonous species (it was touched on somewhat, and those parts I liked the best -- I just wish there had been more of them). The mushroom section was good because of the way the amanitas were covered, and their relationships between species discussed to give us a broader vision of the mushroom world. But after the first third of the book, it sort of just devolved into a list of species with increasingly similar traits, with increasingly less discussion. What about the relationship between potatoes and nightshade? Why solanine? What are cyanogenic glycosides doing in almost every kind of fruit pit? I think perhaps any problems I have with this book are problems that I have with most science books that aren't really intended for scientists: a lot of information is held back because it's seen as "too technical" for a layperson to be interested in... But I think it's all about how you frame the information, and general audiences should be given more credit (especially if they're already picking up a science book). This might be a good resource for people writing novels, or for DMs working alchemy into their RPGs, and perhaps a jumping point for people more interested in the science to look for other more specific books.


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