Spotted Pigs and Green Tomatoes
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Kingsnorth, Paul, 'Your Countryside, Your Choice', Campaign to Protect Rural England, 2005
Oram, Julian, Molly Conisbee and Andrew Simms, 'Ghost Town Britain II: Death on the High Street', New Economics Foundation, 2005
Picket, Heather, 'Supermarkets and Farm Animal Welfare: Raising the Standard', Compassion in World Farming, 2006
Pye-Smith, Charlie, 'Batteries Not Included: Organic Farming and Animal Welfare', Soil Association, 2003
Shah, Hetan and Nic Marks, 'A Well-being Manifesto for a Flourishing Society', New Economics Foundatin, 2004
Simms, Andrew, Julian Oram, Alex MacGillivray and Joe Drury, 'Ghost Town Britain: The Threat from Economic Globalisation to Livelihoods, Liberty and Local Economic Freedom', New Economics Foundation, 2005
Simms, Andrew, Petra Kjell and Ruth Potts 'The Survey Results of the Bland State of the Nation', part of the Clone Town Britain report, New Economics Foundation, 2004
Taylor, John, Matina Madrick and Sam Collin, 'Trading Places: The Local Economic Impact of Street Produce and Farmers' Markets', London Development Agency and New Economics Foundation, 2005
Tulip, Kathryn, and Lucy Michaels, 'A Rough Guide to the UK Farming Crisis', Corporate Watch, 2004
Woodward, David and Andrew Simms, 'Growth Isn't Working: The Uneven Distribution of Benefits and Costs from Economic Growth', New Economics Foundation, 2006
A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR
Rosie Boycott was one of the founders of Spare Rib magazine and Virago Press. She was the editor of Esquire magazine, as well as of the Independent on Sunday, the Independent and the Daily Express. She is a frequent contributor to the Late Review, Woman's Hour and the Politics Show, and has presented her own show on BBC2, Life Etc. She is also the author of A Nice Girl Like Me, an autobiographical story of the '60s and '70s. Rosie is married to the barrister Charles Howard and they live in London and Somerset. She has one daughter, Daisy, four stepchildren, Miranda, Luke, Alex and Francesca, two dogs, Bingo and Dylan, and numerous pigs, chickens, geese and turkeys.
A NOTE ON THE TYPE
The text of this book is set in Linotype Sabon, named after the type founder, Jacques Sabon. It was designed by Jan Tschichold and jointly developed by Linotype, Monotype and Stempel, in response to a need for a typeface to be available in identical form for mechanical hot metal composition and hand composition using foundry type.
Tschichold based his design for Sabon roman on a font engraved by Garamond, and Sabon italic on a font by Granjon. It was first used in 1966 and has proved an enduring modern classic.