The Pig: Breeding, Rearing, and Marketing by Sanders Spencer
Let's be clear from the start: this is not a novel. If you're looking for a narrative with characters and a plot, you've picked up the wrong book. The Pig: Breeding, Rearing, and Marketing is exactly what it says on the tin—a comprehensive guide written in 1885. But that's where its simple description ends and its fascination begins.
The Story
There's no traditional story here. Instead, Spencer builds his case chapter by chapter, like a lawyer arguing for the dignity and profitability of the pig. He starts with the foundation: choosing the right breeds for meat or lard. He walks you through every step—building a proper sty, feeding for efficient growth, managing breeding sows, nursing piglets, and preventing a horrifying array of period-specific diseases. The final sections are brutally practical: how to butcher, cure the meat (hams, bacon, sausages), and finally, how to get the best price at market. It's the complete, circular journey of pig-as-investment, from birth to sold product.
Why You Should Read It
You read this for the voice and the window into a vanished world. Spencer’s passion is palpable. He’s exasperated by common farmer mistakes and fervent about his improved methods. Reading his advice—like warming milk for orphaned piglets or his precise salt ratios for curing—feels like receiving direct, urgent knowledge from a seasoned expert who truly cares about your success. The book hums with a pre-industrial, hands-on intelligence. It’s a masterclass in self-reliance that makes you look at your supermarket pork chop with entirely new eyes. You gain a profound appreciation for the sheer work and skill that once went into something we now take completely for granted.
Final Verdict
This is a niche read, but a rewarding one. It's perfect for history lovers, homesteading enthusiasts, or anyone curious about the roots of our food system. If you enjoy shows about living history or have ever wondered, 'How did they actually do that back then?', this book is a primary source answer. It’s also weirdly compelling for fans of well-organized, earnest expertise on any topic. Approach it not as a storybook, but as a conversation with a fiercely knowledgeable 19th-century farmer, and you'll find it’s full of unexpected charm and grit.
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Jessica Moore
10 months agoNot bad at all.
Patricia Jones
6 months agoEssential reading for students of this field.
Barbara Thomas
5 months agoThe layout is very easy on the eyes.
Ashley Thompson
1 month agoCompatible with my e-reader, thanks.