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Heirloom:

Notes from an Accidental Tomato Farmer
Front Cover
33 Reviews
Broadway Books, 2009 - Biography & Autobiography - 231 pages

Situated beautifully at the intersection of Michael Pollan, Ruth Reichl, and Barbara Kingsolver, Heirloom is an inspiring, elegiac, and gorgeously written memoir about rediscovering an older and still vital way of life.

Fourteen years ago, Tim Stark was living in Brooklyn, working days as a management consultant, and writing unpublished short stories by night. One evening, chancing upon a Dumpster full of discarded lumber, he carried the lumber home and built a germination rack for thousands of heirloom tomato seedlings. His crop soon outgrew the brownstone in which it had sprouted, forcing him to cart the seedlings to his family’s farm in Pennsylvania, where they were transplanted into the ground by hand. When favorable weather brought in a bumper crop, Tim hauled his unusual tomatoes to New York City’s Union Square Greenmarket, at a time when the tomato was unanimously red. The rest is history. Today, Eckerton Hill Farm does a booming trade in heirloom tomatoes and obscure chile peppers. Tim’s tomatoes are featured on the menus of New York City’s most demanding chefs and have even made the cover of Gourmet magazine.

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Review: Heirloom: Notes from an Accidental Tomato Farmer

User Review  - Laura - Goodreads

I found this generally interesting, though I think the author is better suited to being a farmer than a writer. Not that he's a terrible writer, just not the best, in my opinion. Being passingly ... Read full review

Review: Heirloom: Notes from an Accidental Tomato Farmer

User Review  - Christina - Goodreads

I liked Heirloom a lot because I buy 95 percent organic food so I'm impressed with the dedication and hard work it takes to bring produce to a Greenmarket. Along with Heirloom, I recommend It's a Long ... Read full review

All 33 reviews »

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About the author (2009)

Tim Stark is the proprietor of Eckerton Hill Farm in Lenhartsville, Pennsylvania. His writing has appeared on National Public Radio as well as in Gourmet, Condé Nast Traveler, Washington Post, Missouri Review, Alimentum, and Organic Gardening. Tim and his farm have been profiled on National Public Radio.

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