cover image Javatrekker: Dispatches from the World of Fair Trade Coffee

Javatrekker: Dispatches from the World of Fair Trade Coffee

Dean Cycon, . . Chelsea Green, $19.95 (239pp) ISBN 978-1933392707

This surprisingly gripping travelogue is filled with tales from the “coffeelands,” barely-on-the-map locales in Africa, the Americas and Asia where coffee farmers struggle to survive. Written with knowledge and good cheer by the founder and owner of Dean's Beans Organic Coffee, the book reads more like a trippy adventure than a business trip, though the issues Cycon raises are vital, prescient and little known (“99 percent of the people involved in coffee... have never been to a coffee village”). While learning firsthand about the hardships involved in growing and selling coffee beans—the world's second most valuable commodity, after oil—the author finds himself in Guatemala, praying to an effigy wearing a Mickey Mouse tie and cowboy boots; eating armadillo leg in Colombia; working to heal landmine victims in Nicaragua and war widows in Sumatra; and meeting with all manner of farmers, bureaucrats and dignitaries. His dispatches are highly enlightening, demonstrating how few national governments provide coffee growers with water, education, health care or even protection from harmful pesticides; further, coffee growers' income is subject to the whims of financial speculators half a world away. After reading this eye-opening book, it's impossible not to reconsider—and feel grateful for—the myriad people behind your morning cup. (Oct.)