Incoming Resources
- Harvest for hope, a guide to mindful eating, Jane Goodall with Gary McAvoy and Gail Hudson
- Up we grow!, a year in the life of a small, local farm, written by Deborah Hodge ; photographed by Brian Harris
- Backyard market gardening, the entrepreneur's guide to selling what you grow, by Andrew W. Lee ; foreword by Jim Hightower ; introduced and edited by George DeVault
- The organic farming manual, a comprehensive guide to starting and running a certified organic farm, Ann Larkin Hansen
- Small-scale homesteading, a sustainable guide to gardening, keeping chickens, maple sugaring, preserving the harvest, and more, Stephanie Thurow & Michelle Bruhn
- In organic we trust, Pasture Pictures presentation ; written & directed by R. Kiplin Pastor
- The new rules of the roost, organic care & feeding for the family flock, Robert Litt and Hannah Litt
- Organic farming, everything you need to know, Peter Fossel
- Bioshelter market garden, a permaculture farm, Darrell Frey
- The sustainable homestead, create a thriving permaculture ecosystem with your garden, animals, and land, Angela Ferraro-Fanning ; foreword by Temple Grandin
- Fatal harvest, the tragedy of industrial agriculture, edited by Andrew Kimbrell
- Natural beekeeping, organic approaches to modern apiculture, Ross Conrad
- The ecological farm, a minimalist no-till, no-spray, selective-weeding, grow-your-own-fertilizer system for organic agriculture, Helen Atthowe ; foreword by Paul Muller
- The flower farmer, an organic grower's guide to raising and selling cut flowers, Lynn Byczynski ; illustrations by Robin Wimbiscus
- The new organic grower, a master's manual of tools and techniques for the home and market gardener, Eliot Coleman ; photographs by Barbara Damrosch
- The market gardener, a successful grower's handbook for small-scale organic farming, Jean-Martin Fortier ; foreword by Severine von Tscharner Fleming, The Greenhorns ; illustrations by Marie Bilodeau
- Fields of plenty, a farmer's journey in search of real food and the people who grow it, text and photographs by Michael Ableman