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Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History (Fifty Things That Changed the Course of History) Paperback – July 30, 2015
Purchase options and add-ons
The fascinating stories of the plants that changed civilizations.
"This book will mesmerize plant-lovers and non-gardeners alike."
--American Gardener
"This marvelous collection of tales deserves to be read and enjoyed."
--Chicago Botanic Garden
Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History is a beautifully presented guide to the plants that have had the greatest impact on human civilization. Entries feature a description of the plant, its botanical name, its native range and its primary functions--edible, medicinal, commercial or practical. Concise text is highlighted by elegant botanical drawings, paintings and photographs as well as insightful quotes.
Many of the plants are well known, such as rice, tea, cotton, rubber, wheat, sugarcane, tobacco, wine grapes and corn. However, there are also many whose stories are less known. These history-changing plants include:
- Agave, used to make sisal, poison arrows, bullets, tequila and surgical thread
- Pineapple, which influenced the construction of greenhouses
- Hemp, used for hangman's rope, sustainable plastics, the Declaration of Independence and Levi's jeans
- Coconut, used for coir fiber, soap, margarine, cream, sterile IV drips and coagulants
- Eucalyptus, used in mouthwash, diuretics, vitamins, honey, underwear and fire-resistant uniforms
- Sweet pea, which Gregor Mendel used in his research on genetics
- White mulberry, used to feed the caterpillars that make silk
- English oak, used for fire-resistant structures, dyes, leather tanning, charcoal, casks and ships
- White willow, used in the manufacture of aspirin, cricket bats, hot-air balloon baskets and coffins.
This attractive reference provides an innovative perspective on both botanical and human history.
- Print length224 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFirefly Books
- Publication dateJuly 30, 2015
- Dimensions6.75 x 0.63 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101770855882
- ISBN-13978-1770855885
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
[Review of hardcover edition:] This is a handsome book. A delight to look at and a pleasure to hold. It is also a pleasure to read, not just because each page is beautifully illustrated but also because of the unusual, unexpected and fascinating histories it charts.... Each page is packed with facts. The Latin names and common names of each plant, a brief outline of its importance to us, the history of its uses and misuses, and countless small details...all give the reader a lot to absorb, but everything is presented in a humorous, easy-going way laced with plenty of curious anecdotes.... Bill Laws weaves together strands of ecological, political and agricultural history. His scope is worldwide and it ranges from the words of early herbalists to the discoveries of modern science. He draws inspiration from myth and legend, and, occasionally from the early philosophers. And the illustrations come from art, history, old magazines and modern botanical photography. Altogether, Laws has done a fine job. -- Ann Skea ― Midwest Book Review Published On: 2011-04-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] The illustrations are from other works, but, honestly, I hardly looked at them because the prose packed such a wallop. -- Linda Yang ― North American Rock Garden Society (www.nargs.org) Published On: 2012-01-31
[Review of hardcover edition:] A fascinating compendium that covers edible medicinal commercial and practical species. -- K. Reka Badger ― Santa-Barbara News Press Published On: 2011-03-26
[Review of hardcover edition:] Bill Laws provides a concise profile of each of the plants included in his well-designed book. These informed entries are enhanced by botanical drawings and other illustrations. The entries make for entertaining reading. Even so, my favorite chapter feature was the sidebar box. Inside these brief newsy boxes the reader gets a peek outside the box of the normal. It's a peek at the wildcards that have emerged from the shuffled deck of human experience with plants. -- William Scheick ― Texas Gardener's Seeds Published On: 2011-03-02
[Review of hardcover edition:] This is a surprisingly easy, and good, read. The subject changes faster than a kaleidoscope image within each chapter, and there are insights into most of the large cultures of the globe.... It is a useful read for adults, and it practically begs to be given to one's acquaintances of the early or mid-teen years who could use a look at the wider world. They will like it. With any luck, they will go out looking for more information on the subject presented in the brief, glittering flashes here. And, if you play your cards right, they will let you read it, too, when they are done with it. ― Washington Gardener Published On: 2011-10-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History, by Bill Laws, presents interesting information and impressions about plants. -- Joel Lerner ― Washington Post Published On: 2011-03-04
[Review of hardcover edition:] This book will mesmerize plant-lovers and non-gardeners alike. ― American Gardener Published On: 2011-07-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] (reviewed with Fifty Animals that Changed the Course of History) These two volumes from Firefly uncover some of the most interesting stories of how animals and plants have impacted human civilization in economic, political, and industrial history. This is an original approach that links the biological sciences to the social sciences and students and general readers will find many interesting stories within these pages. -- Shannon Graff Hysell ― American Reference Books Annual 2012 Published On: 2012-04-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] This attractive and fun natural history of plants showcases fifty species that have influenced human history in significant ways. Each entry features color illustrations and photographs, interesting fact sidebars and information about distribution and growing conditions. Narratives detail the importance of each plant and range from ancient remedies and poisons to crop plants that formed trade and economic networks around the globe to bases for modern technological advances. The volume is designed for easy reference and includes information on further readings and Internet resources. ― Book News Published On: 2011-12-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] Fifty Plants That Changed the Course of History offers capsule summaries of the culinary, medicinal, commercial, or practical significance of 50 familiar plants. Some will be obvious (wheat, wine grapes), but Laws manages to throw in some interesting and little-known history about each. For example, the 17th-century French Benedictine monk Dom Perignon, who helped develop still wines in the region of Champagne, is sometimes credited with first sealing a wine bottle with a stopper made from cork oak; and pharmacist Wilbur Scoville devised a test for rating the heat of a chili pepper in 1912. -- George M. Eberhart ― C and RL News (Association of College and Research Libraries) Published On: 2011-10-01
[Review of hardcover edition:] How wonderful are plants! That is the theme of this compilation of stories of the usefulness of 50 remarkable plants. Attractively illustrated, the text contains short essays on plants that provide sustenance, medicine, fragrance, spice, color, clothing, and much more. Lest we forget, the common sweet pea provided the means for establishing the scientific field of genetics. This marvelous collection of tales deserves to be read and enjoyed. -- Marilyn K. Alaimo ― Chicago Botanic Garden Published On: 2011-06-30
[Review of hardcover edition:] Much more than a "plant book," this is a beauty packed with historical detail and art that will feed your eyes, your mind and your spirit as you learn about plants in a way you've never experienced. Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History is by Bill Laws, who intends the book to be an encyclopedia of "plants that have had the greatest impact on human civilization," according to the book jacket. But he has made his encyclopedia so much more. It's chock-full of life, art, typography, history and botany, and I've never been more pleasantly surprised with a "plant book" than this one.... Beautiful art reproductions, classy typography and eye-catching design work together to present a gathering of the history behind these 50 plants that will keep you coming back for a good look (and read) over and over. -- Karen Gallagher ― Dayton Beach News-Journal Published On: 2011-04-16
[Review of hardcover edition:] Covering economic, political and industrial history, Bill shows how the plants' uses have changed over time. Recognizing both common as well as those plants whose roles are less well known, Bill provides an innovative perspective on both botanical and human history. Gardeners and social historians will find this book fascinating to read. ― Fifty-Five Plus Published On: 2012-09-30
[Review of hardcover edition:] Beautifully illustrated with botanical drawings, paintings, and photos, this fascinating reference offers insights into both botany and social history. -- Liz Grogan ― Good Times Published On: 2011-06-30
[Review of hardcover edition:] It is a very useful guide to the basic fifty plants that humans had cultivated from the beginning of agriculture. For each, there is a description of the plant, the botanical name, its native range, and its primary function... There is also a lot of cultural and social history for each plant: Laws explains why it is in the Top Fifty (many plants get two pages here; corn gets six pages). This text is complemented by botanical drawings, paintings and photographs, and quotes from deep thinkers... There's a bibliography for further reading... Audience and level of use: the historically curious, foodies, reference libraries, schools of hospitality and cooking... Well-priced, and it comes with a ribbon bookmark. -- Dean Tudor ― gothicepicures.blogspot.com Published On: 2011-03-17
[Review of hardcover edition:] Bill Laws brings trivia buffs a treasure trove of quirky facts about fifty plants that made a difference in the world. It matters not whether you're a gardener or that you simply enjoy learning obscure information -- this is a book for the curious sort. -- Kylee Baumle ― Horticulture Published On: 2011-04-20
[Review of hardcover edition:] We can't live without plants. They provide oxygen, food, clothes, medicine and shelter. From great lists of all-important plants, social historian Bill Laws brings us the fascinating stories of 50 that have actually altered civilizations. Among them: black pepper, which led to a need for banking; sugar, which fueled the slave trade; and white willow, used to make aspirin, cricket bats, hot-air balloon baskets and coffins. You might want to pick up two copies of this beautifully illustrated, fun read--one for the gardener on your list and one for you. -- Kathy Huber ― Houston Chronicle Published On: 2011-12-16
[Review of hardcover edition:] If the origin of plants interests you, and learning more about the history behind their uses, a new book by Bill Laws is well worth a read. Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History provides insight into the way plants used as fuel, food, weapons and medicines have had an impact on civilizations. -- David Hobson ― Kitchener Record Published On: 2011-04-01
About the Author
Bill Laws is a social historian and the author of 10 books. He has contributed to such publications as the Guardian, the Daily Telegraph and BBC History magazine. He lives in England.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction
What greater delight is there than to behold the earth apparelled with plants, as with a robe of embroidered worke, set with Orient pearles and garnished with great diversitie of rare and costly jewels?
-- John Gerard. Herbal, 1597
If the world's plants suddenly expired, we would have no tomorrow. Yet it is easy to dismiss plants as the silent witnesses to our progress on the planet. The world nurtures between 250,000 and 300,000 types of flowering plants and they can seem like a pretty backcloth to our remorseless activity: walking a dog through a forest of quiet oaks; driving a car past purple fields of lavender; riding the train across a prairie of wheat.
PLANTS AND PEOPLE
In reality, plants have played a dynamic role in shaping our history. Life on Earth is made possible by the very breath of plants, by the way they absorb carbon dioxide (C02) and exhale oxygen. Plants may have even paved the way for us, evolving the process of photosynthesis in response to some prehistoric climate catastrophe and opening the DNA gates for the evolution of terrestrial animals like ourselves.
Grains of pollen frozen beneath the Antarctic ice may yet reveal the secrets of our Earth's own past. They could help predict its future too, solving the puzzle over whether the current hole in the ozone layer, attributed to our use of fossil fuels, was prefigured millions of years ago. Plant history is certainly longer than ours. While plants have been colonizing the planet for 470 million years, our own timeline is huddled into a relatively recent past. If every century counted as a minute on the face of a clock, the Romans conquered Europe twenty minutes ago; Christianity was founded less than a quarter of an hour back; and the first white people only settled in America in the time it takes to turn the beans of Coffea arabica into a decent cup of coffee.
Plants have always provided us with fuel, food, shelter, and medicines. They have always controlled the rate of land erosion and regulated the amount of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the air that we breathe. They have given us the fossil fuels that we are consuming with such profligacy and they have inspired us to build national botanical gardens, to go garden visiting, and to spend small for tunes on cultivating our own back yard plant collections.
We have self-harmed on plants too, overeating sugar, dosing up on natural narcotics, over indulging in alcohol. An overweight Durban housewife might rue the day that sugar (p.166) was first refined; an inebriate in Adelaide might blame his sorrows on barley (p.104), while some poor patient in a Cincinnati cancer ward could hold tobacco (p.136) responsible for his condition. On the other hand, we can rejoice in a cup of tea (p.26), celebrate with a glass of wine (see Wine Grape, p.202) or simply drink in the scent of the sweet pea (p.118) and the rose (p.162).
FRAGILE EARTH
This is a good time to look at how plants have altered the history of our life on Earth and how they continue to play a pivotal role. We are taking liberties with our plants and, in doing so, with planet Earth. It cannot continue. By consuming the fossil fuels that were made from plants and destroying the plants that make up the rainforests we are, according to the paleoclimatology scientist Professor David Beerling, "undertaking a global uncontrolled experiment guaranteed to alter the climate for future generations. Plants . . . are a major factor in the environmental drama of global warming now as they have been in the recent and more distant past" (The Emerald Planet, 2007). The perils of destroying our plants could alter the course of history forever.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction
What greater delight is there than to behold the earth apparelled with plants, as with a robe of embroidered worke, set with Orient pearles and garnished with great diversitie of rare and costly jewels?
-- John Gerard. Herbal, 1597
If the world's plants suddenly expired, we would have no tomorrow. Yet it is easy to dismiss plants as the silent witnesses to our progress on the planet. The world nurtures between 250,000 and 300,000 types of flowering plants and they can seem like a pretty backcloth to our remorseless activity: walking a dog through a forest of quiet oaks; driving a car past purple fields of lavender; riding the train across a prairie of wheat.
PLANTS AND PEOPLE
In reality, plants have played a dynamic role in shaping our history. Life on Earth is made possible by the very breath of plants, by the way they absorb carbon dioxide (C02) and exhale oxygen. Plants may have even paved the way for us, evolving the process of photosynthesis in response to some prehistoric climate catastrophe and opening the DNA gates for the evolution of terrestrial animals like ourselves.
Grains of pollen frozen beneath the Antarctic ice may yet reveal the secrets of our Earth's own past. They could help predict its future too, solving the puzzle over whether the current hole in the ozone layer, attributed to our use of fossil fuels, was prefigured millions of years ago. Plant history is certainly longer than ours. While plants have been colonizing the planet for 470 million years, our own timeline is huddled into a relatively recent past. If every century counted as a minute on the face of a clock, the Romans conquered Europe twenty minutes ago; Christianity was founded less than a quarter of an hour back; and the first white people only settled in America in the time it takes to turn the beans of Coffea arabica into a decent cup of coffee.
Plants have always provided us with fuel, food, shelter, and medicines. They have always controlled the rate of land erosion and regulated the amount of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the air that we breathe. They have given us the fossil fuels that we are consuming with such profligacy and they have inspired us to build national botanical gardens, to go garden visiting, and to spend small for tunes on cultivating our own back yard plant collections.
We have self-harmed on plants too, overeating sugar, dosing up on natural narcotics, over indulging in alcohol. An overweight Durban housewife might rue the day that sugar (p.166) was first refined; an inebriate in Adelaide might blame his sorrows on barley (p.104), while some poor patient in a Cincinnati cancer ward could hold tobacco (p.136) responsible for his condition. On the other hand, we can rejoice in a cup of tea (p.26), celebrate with a glass of wine (see Wine Grape, p.202) or simply drink in the scent of the sweet pea (p.118) and the rose (p.162).
FRAGILE EARTH
This is a good time to look at how plants have altered the history of our life on Earth and how they continue to play a pivotal role. We are taking liberties with our plants and, in doing so, with planet Earth. It cannot continue. By consuming the fossil fuels that were made from plants and destroying the plants that make up the rainforests we are, according to the paleoclimatology scientist Professor David Beerling, "undertaking a global uncontrolled experiment guaranteed to alter the climate for future generations. Plants . . . are a major factor in the environmental drama of global warming now as they have been in the recent and more distant past" (The Emerald Planet, 2007). The perils of destroying our plants could alter the course of history
Product details
- Publisher : Firefly Books; Reprint edition (July 30, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 224 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1770855882
- ISBN-13 : 978-1770855885
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 0.63 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #132,770 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #265 in Plants in Biological Sciences
- #2,904 in World History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Bill Laws (www.billlaws.com)is the author of A History of the Garden in Fifty Tools, Fifty Railways that Changed the Course of History and Fifty Plants That Changed the Course of History. He has written for the Wall Street Journal, BBC, The Telegraph and The Guardian and is former editor of Britain's national magazine for Gypsies and Travellers, Travellers' Times. The author of more than 20 books, he is currently writing a history of World War One.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book interesting and informative, with plenty of fascinating facts about plants and excellent summaries of each one. The book features gorgeous illustrations, including color drawings, and customers appreciate its readability and value for money. They enjoy the stories, with one customer noting how they interweave commercial elements.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy this book, finding it interesting and fun to read, with one customer noting it's particularly suitable for gardeners.
"I wasn't expecting this to be a good book, but I realized this is one that is to be read cover to cover...." Read more
"...I am very happy with service from Amazon and the book is so interesting...." Read more
"...Even with what I feel to be minor setbacks, I quite enjoyed reading this book...." Read more
"...If you're looking for a nicely designed book and a light entertaining read about food, you'll enjoy it." Read more
Customers find the book very informative, with plenty of fascinating facts about plants and excellent summaries of each one.
"...The information about each plant (which is only a select few) is so fascinating that it's worth reading all the information about each one rather..." Read more
"...in the usefulness of plants, their origin for human use and many facts about their uses." Read more
"...Finding the facts intriguing enough to reiterate them to my significant other when I came across something I found interesting...." Read more
"...Very interesting info on a variety of plants." Read more
Customers appreciate the illustrations in the book, describing them as gorgeous color drawings.
"...There are a few photos and illustrations that accompany each plant, so it breaks up the text nicely." Read more
"This book is a wonderful review of many plants. Photos and drawings beautifully augment the reading...." Read more
"...factor, it's not bad for (very) light reading and some of the pictures are nice...." Read more
"...I'm glad I bought it: information, color photos, color drawings, high quality paper, special fonts, and very affordable !..." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read, with one mentioning that the text is nicely broken up and another noting its fine printing.
"...photos and illustrations that accompany each plant, so it breaks up the text nicely." Read more
"A really good read and a really good buy. You know how they say you learn something new everyday? Pick this book up and you will learn TONNES...." Read more
"...If you're looking for a nicely designed book and a light entertaining read about food, you'll enjoy it." Read more
"...it: information, color photos, color drawings, high quality paper, special fonts, and very affordable !..." Read more
Customers find the book offers good value for money.
"A really good read and a really good buy. You know how they say you learn something new everyday? Pick this book up and you will learn TONNES...." Read more
"...The stories interweave commercial, medicinal, economic, and social roles played by plants over time, however, it can be a bit disorganized and..." Read more
"...photos, color drawings, high quality paper, special fonts, and very affordable ! the only minus is the font size, a trifle too small...." Read more
"...The illustrations are excellent. Great gift for the price.." Read more
Customers enjoy the stories in the book, with one mentioning how they interweave commercial elements.
"...The stories interweave commercial, medicinal, economic, and social roles played by plants over time, however, it can be a bit disorganized and..." Read more
"...It has interesting stories for history, but too many errors and omissions in the scientific components, which cause me to wonder if there are also..." Read more
"This was a gift for the mom and she absolutely loves it! The stories are interesting and well written and the hardcover book was put together..." Read more
"Love this book it is so interesting" Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2013I wasn't expecting this to be a good book, but I realized this is one that is to be read cover to cover. The information about each plant (which is only a select few) is so fascinating that it's worth reading all the information about each one rather than skimming over the pages. There are a few photos and illustrations that accompany each plant, so it breaks up the text nicely.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2011Had a problem with USPS, called Amazon and they shipped another one and I received it the next day. I am very happy with service from Amazon and the book is so interesting. Plants helped shape history and I recommend this books to anyone interested in the usefulness of plants, their origin for human use and many facts about their uses.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2013The facts for each of the plants were interesting and informative. Though I did find it hard to read sometimes, going back and having to re-read a section a couple of times. I believe this was because the author was also defining words in the sentence as well as trying to give you the information. By the time you got done reading what the word meant you had to go back a reread to know that the sentence was original saying.
I will say again, that I found the information interesting, if not even intriguing. There were a couple of sections that I even marked pages, because I was so interested that I wanted to do further research into an area. There were some facts that I felt the author might have been grasping at straws. For example oranges being linked to malaria or coffee being linked to the Declaration of independence. But in the author defense, some of these facts could have been minor facts supporting or even in addition to the main connection to history.
Even with what I feel to be minor setbacks, I quite enjoyed reading this book. Finding the facts intriguing enough to reiterate them to my significant other when I came across something I found interesting. I am also letting/recommending this book to my step father who enjoys books like these. More than likely I will be rereading this book again, and adding it to me "keep books".
- Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2019Wonderful to see how these plants were so effective in changing life in so many ways. Who would ever have suspected?
- Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2020Bought the hard cover because at the time it was only about $.50 more than a soft cover. Very interesting info on a variety of plants.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2012This book is a wonderful review of many plants. Photos and drawings beautifully augment the reading. The book is not limited to North American plants, but includes many tropicals, like pineapple,coffee, coca, etc. A great history lesson!
- Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2020I'm a botany nut and a history nut. I really enjoyed this book relating plants to history. I know ll the plants well, but learned much about the way they were used in the past.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2013A really good read and a really good buy. You know how they say you learn something new everyday? Pick this book up and you will learn TONNES. I cant put it down
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Canada on June 9, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars A very interesting and useful book ....
Very well researched and presented .. a very welcome addition to our family library .. Thanks to the author's painstaking effort ... appreciated ..
-
AmazonianReviewed in Mexico on April 28, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Un gran libro para amantes de la botánica
Este libro tiene unas extraordinarias ilustraciones que te llevan a un viaje por las plantas históricas de nuestro planeta. Lo recomiendo como regalo para amantes de la botánica o la jardinería.
- Rita SchafferReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 24, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
This is a very easy to read, yet enjoyable book. I have only read a few pages thus far & yet I have found it fascinating to read that tequila comes from the Agave plant - not to mention so many other things. I had never even heard of agave. There are some lovely drawings and the book has an old world feel to it. A really lovely book to own.
It was packaged very cleverly in cardboard so that it arrived in pristine condition. Excellent work Amazon for recommending this book. Only one query: there is nil information in the book about the author. Who is Bill Laws?
- Cliente AmazonReviewed in Spain on August 16, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars biology curiosity
very interesting
- Sheila Joan WhiteReviewed in Canada on September 8, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars good, clean copies
This is an interesting book to keep and to give for gifts. Amazon makes shopping so easy! I recommend this shopping system to all my friends! sjw