University of Washington
Leaflet for Scholars from the Elisabeth C. Miller Library

Volume 12, Issue 12 | December 2025

The Accidental Seed Heroes by Adam Alexander
Reviewed by Priscilla Grundy
 
The accidental seed heroes : growing a delicious food future for all of us / Adam Alexander ; foreword by Rekha Mistry.
 
 

For millennia farmers and gardeners everywhere have saved seeds from their best plants each season to improve the next year’s crops. In The Accidental Seed Heroes Adam Alexander argues that in the quest for food crops that can survive climate change, “Indigenous farmers, independent local breeders, and obsessive and passionately committed amateurs and professionals who believe in freely sharing their work” are the best ones to keep us alive. They can maintain and develop traditional crops and breed new cultivars that use little or no chemical fertilizer and, he stresses, taste delicious.

 
 
Many contemporary people and places already doing that work appear in this book. Each chapter describes challenges and successes relating to a different plant, mostly vegetables. Throughout Alexander argues against the planting of monocultures, which are particularly likely to be afflicted by disease, and against the practices of the giant seed companies that promote those monocultures and control new cultivars by patenting them.

In the chapter “A Future Full of Beans” the author follows the search for improved varieties of several kinds of beans – lima, fava, greasy, soy, navy. Local variants called Farmers’ Varieties lead the way, as they do in every chapter. He cites his own practice with greasy beans, traditionally grown in Appalachia. Due to climate change they now grow well in his garden in southern Wales.

Navy beans figure in climate change, too. To make Heinz baked beans in Britain, 52,000 tons of navy beans are imported every year to a single factory. It produces three million cans of baked beans every day. Brits do like their baked beans. Most of the imports are from one source, the U.S., which is worrisome. With climate change and perhaps development of new Farmers’ Varieties, navy beans may soon grow in Britain.

Look to other chapters, on wheat, peas, apples, eggplant, and other crops for many more tasty seed stories of hope for the future.

Arts & Crafts Exhibit & Sale

tea towels from Chavah's Garden, print of wildflowers by Molly Hashimoto, and floral prints by Susan Lally-Chiu
Work by three local artists is included in this group show and sale at the Miller Library:
  • Chavah’s Garden ~ tea towels, aprons and more
  • Molly Hashimoto ~ paintings, prints and cards
  • Susan Lally-Chiu ~ linocut prints of Northwest flora and fauna, handprinted textiles
Join us for an opening reception Monday, December 8 from 5 to 7 pm. The exhibit is open during library hours.
Reserve the Program Room
Program Room with mural by Reve Hansen and Whealon Costello
The Miller Library Program Room – a gift from the Miller Charitable Foundation – is used for library programs and displays, and as preparation space for library events. 

The room is also available at no charge for use by current students, staff and faculty of the UW Botanic Gardens, and for community groups engaged in horticulture, gardens, or the study of plants. Make a reservation soon!

Thank you!


Thanks to community support, the Miller Library offers the best in horticultural reference assistance. We are so thankful for your generosity. See what's new in our Annual Update.

Digital resources

book reviews
Online thesis collection
Facilitating the interpretation of the Washington Park Arboretum : a selective review and application of the Interpretive and Wayfinding Plan / Christina A. Cadenhead.
Journals available online

New to the library

The University Botanic Gardens Ljubljana, the guardians of biodiversity for 210 years / Jože Bavcon, Nada Praprotnik, Blanka Ravnjak.
Urban plants / Trevor Dines.
Mulberries in the rain : growing permaculture plants for food and friendship / Ryan Blosser & Trevor Piersol.
Wonderlands : British garden designers at home / Clare Coulson ; photography by Éva Németh.
The kindest garden : a practical guide to regenerative gardening / Marian Boswall ; photography by Jason Ingram.
Cacti and succulents : on-point advice to keep your plants looking sharp / the plant rescuer Sarah Gerrard-Jones.
Wild in Seattle : stories at the crossroads of people and nature / David B. Williams ; illustrations by Elizabeth Person.
Trees and shrubs for temperate climates / Gordon Courtright.
Europe's alpine flowers a field guide Bob Gibbons.
The new beautiful : inspiring gardens for a resilient future / foreword by Piet Oudolf ; editor for Gardens Illustrated: Stephanie Mahon.
Landscape painting in watercolor.
Renaturing : small ways to wild the world / James Canton.
I, Buxus : a cultural history of the Tree of Afterlife / Tomasz Aniśko.
Small and miniature daylilies / Scott Elliott.
Blossoms of Kamakura. Hana no Kamakura : Harada Hiroshi shashinshū = Blossoms of Kamakura.
The gardens of Mien Ruys : strong design, lush planting, and the origins of the modernist garden / Conny den Hollander ; English translation: Kay Dixon.
Feijoa : a story of obsession & belonging / Kate Evans.
Gentle dyes / by Cheryl Samuel and Carol Higgins ; pictures by Peggy Sheehan.
The flower hunter : Ellis Rowan / Patricia Fullerton.
To design landscape : art, nature & utility / Catherine Dee.
Gardening for bumblebees : a practical guide to creating a paradise for pollinators / Dave Goulson.
Ancient dyes for modern weavers.
The self-fed farm and garden : a return to the roots of the organic method / Eliot Coleman ; introduction by Dan Barber.
Chasing bats and tracking rats : urban ecology, community science, and how we share our cities / written by Cylita Guy ; illustrations by Cornelia Li.
Through Georgia's eyes / Rachel Rodríguez ; illustrated by Julie Paschkis.
Plant attack! : the fascinating ways flora defends itself / Erin Silver ; illustrated by Julie McLaughlin.
Leafy landmarks : travels with trees / by Michelle Schaub ; illustrated by Anne Lambelet.
Wintergarden / Janet Fox ; illustrated by Jasu Hu.
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