Gregory Lewis McNamee
Encyclopædia Britannica Editor
Contributing Editor, Encyclopædia Britannica; Literary Critic, Hollywood Reporter. Author of Moveable Feasts: The History, Science, and Lore of Food and others.
Primary Contributions (244)
Ben Sasse is an American Republican politician who represented Nebraska in the U.S. Senate from 2015 to 2023. He later served as president of the University of Florida (2023–24). Sasse grew up in Fremont, near Omaha, Nebraska, where he excelled in high school. He went on to study at Harvard…
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Publications (3)
Gila: The Life and Death of an American River, Updated and Expanded Edition (October 2012)
For sixty million years, the Gila River, longer than the Hudson and the Delaware combined, has shaped the ecology of the Southwest from its source in New Mexico to its confluence with the Colorado River in Arizona. Today, for at least half its length, the Gila is dead, like so many of the West's great rivers, owing to overgrazing, damming, and other practices. This richly documented cautionary tale narrates the Gila's natural and human history. Now updated, McNamee's study traces recent efforts...
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Aelian's On the Nature of Animals (July 2011)
Not much can be said with certainty about the life of Claudius Aelianus, known to us as Aelian. He was born sometime between A.D. 165 and 170 in the hill town of Praeneste, what is now Palestrina, about twenty-five miles from Rome, Italy. He grew up speaking that town’s version of Latin, a dialect that other speakers of the language seem to have found curious, butsomewhat unusually for his generation, though not for Romans of earlier timeshe preferred to communicate in Greek. Trained by a sophist...
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Moveable Feasts: The History, Science, and Lore of Food (At Table) (April 2008)
Food has functioned both as a source of continuity and as a subject of adaptation over the course of human history. Onions have been a staple of the European diet since the Paleolithic era; by contrast, the orange is once again being cultivated in large quantities in southern China, where it was originally grown. Other foods remain staples of their original regions as well as of the world diet at large. Still others are now grown in places that would have seemed impossible in the past—bananas...
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