The Meaning of Beer
How Our Pursuit of the Perfect Pint Built the World
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Narrated by:
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Jonny Garrett
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By:
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Jonny Garrett
What’s the oldest and most consumed alcoholic beverage on earth? Beer, of course. And it might just be one of our more important inventions.
Since its creation thirteen thousand years ago, our love of beer has shaped everything from religious ceremonies to advertising, and architecture to bioengineering. The people who built the pyramids were paid in ale; the first fridge was built for beer, not food; bacteria was discovered while investigating sour beer; Germany’s beer halls hosted Hitler’s rise to power; and brewer’s yeast may yet be the answer to climate change.
In The Meaning of Beer, award-winning beer writer Jonny Garrett tells the stories of these incredible human moments and inventions, taking readers to some of the best-known beer destinations in the world—Munich and Oktoberfest, Carlsberg Brewery’s historic laboratory, St. Louis and the home of Budweiser—as well as those lesser known, from a five-thousand-year-old brewery in the Egyptian desert to Arctic Svalbard, home to the world’s most northerly pub.
Ultimately, this is not a book about how we made beer, but how beer made us.
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A book I couldn't put down
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Fun and knowledgeable
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To cut to the chase, the anti-Christian/anti-religion tone popped up early and often. At first I thought it might just be poorly worded. However, then the author felt the need to declare to his audience that he was is an atheist, that he was forced by his parents to go to church as a kid, and that beer has had a bigger influence on history than Jesus (not once but twice) all before halfway through the third chapter. At that point I came to the conclusion that I was wasting minutes of my life to continue listening. All this in a book about BEER!!!
The history of beer, especially in western civilization, has many nexuses with the Christian Church. Apparently the author is very uncomfortable with that fact.
I thought it would be just about beer
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