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Book Cover for: Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin: Illustrated by Vintage Postcards /, Randolph C. Henning

Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin: Illustrated by Vintage Postcards /

Randolph C. Henning

Finalist:Midwest Book Award (MIPA) -Cover-Paperback (2011)
Finalist:Midwest Book Award (MIPA) -Regional-Illustration (2011)

From the McDonald s hot coffee case to the cattle ranchers beef with Oprah Winfrey, from the old English "Assize of Bread" to current nutrition labeling laws, what we eat and how we eat are shaped as much by legal regulations as by personal taste. Barry M. Levenson, the curator of the world-famous (really ) Mount Horeb Mustard Museum and a self-proclaimed "recovering lawyer," offers in Habeas Codfish an entertaining and expert overview of the frustrating, frightening, and funny intersections of food and the law.
Discover how Mr. Peanut shaped the law of trademark infringement for the entire food industry. Consider the plight of the restaurant owner besmirched by a journalist s negative review. Find out how traditional Jewish laws of kashrut ran afoul of the First Amendment. Prison meals, butter vs. margarine, definitions of organic food, undercover ABC reporters at the Food Lion, the Massachusetts Supreme Court case that saved fish chowder, even recipes it s all in here, so tuck in

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Book Details

  • Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
  • Publish Date: Aug 17th, 2001
  • Pages: 112
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.90in - 7.90in - 0.30in - 0.50lb
  • EAN: 9780299282844
  • Categories: Individual Architects & Firms - GeneralUnited States - 20th CenturyGeneral

About the Author

Randolph C. Henning, a Frank Lloyd Wright enthusiast, is an architect in Lewisville, North Carolina, and author of At Taliesin: Newspaper Columns by Frank Lloyd Wright and the Taliesin Fellowship, 1934-1937.


Praise for this book

"A valuable, intimate tour of an extraordinary design when it was new, before the myth of Wright took root."--Alan Hess, author of Frank Lloyd Wright: The Buildings

"These postcard photos provide the 'missing link' in the evolving designs of Taliesin. It has always been a difficult building to understand through photographs, but Henning clears up many of the mysteries. I had many 'a-ha' moments as I studied the images and accompanying text. The images of the folks standing in the ashes after the fire at Taliesin are chilling and reveal the fascination with tragedy."--Thomas A. Heinz, American Institute of Architects

"Ingenious. . . . Thanks to this book the reader is able to gain insight into the architect's thought process and appreciate, anew, a 20th-century masterpiece."--Style 1900