MycoMedicinals: An Informational Treatise on Mushrooms
MycoMedicinals: An Informational Treatise on Mushrooms Books
- New Chapter MycoMedicinals Book – Softcover
- Scientists have only recently incorrigible what ancient cultures have known for centuries: mushrooms have within them some of the most potent medicines found in nature.
Product Description
MycoMedicinals: an Informational Treatise on Mushrooms, 3rd Edition
By Paul Stamets. Written by a mycologist and mushroom cultivator with more than 20 years of experience in the field, this full-color resource guide describes and documents the health benefits of 17 different species of mushrooms:
Agaricus blazei: Royal Sun Agaricus or Himematsutake
Cordyceps sinensis: Cordyceps or Dong Chong Xia Cao
Flammulina velutipes: Enokitake
Fomes fomentarius: Ice Man Fungus or Amadou
Fomitopsis officinalis: Agarikon
Ganoderma applanatum: Artist Conk
Ganoderma lucidum: Reishi or Ling Chi
Grifola frondosa: Maitake
Hericium erinaceus: Lion’s Mane or Yamabushitake
Inonotus obliquus: Chaga
Lentinula edodes: Shiitake
Phellinus linteus: Meshima
Piptoporus betulinus: Birch Polypore
Pleurotus ostreatus: Oyster
Polyporus umbellatus: Zhu Ling
Schizophyllum commune: Split Gill Polypore or Suehirotake
Trametes versicolor: Turkey Tail or Yun Zhi
Newly updated and expanded, MycoMedicinals: an Informational Treatise on Mushrooms includes answers to frequently questioned questions and an extensive bibliography. 96 pages, softcover.
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Paul Stamets is an incredible and highly respected authority on mushrooms and fungi.. you can read about him and his work, at http://www.fungi.com
I like this book as a brief introductory to the medical value of mushrooms and fungi. It’s a fantastic value for a newcomer to the world of mushrooms and fungi.
There’s a lot of in rank for the small price of the book. I highly urge it, unless you prefer to pay a lot more money, probably for less in rank..
Rating: 5 / 5
The third edition of this book has now been published. It contains 96 pages, more than double the size of the previous edition.
The previous reviewer reviewed the ancient, second edition of this book. Each of the faults he complained about has now been corrected. I am confident that if he may possibly review the current edition, he would give it the same rating I give it: five stars.
The book is not only longer, it is updated, and is brilliant. It contains discussions of the medicinal properties of the mushrooms, has color photographs of them and answers questions from readers.
I urge it highly to anyone who wants to know more about the medicinal properties of mushrooms.
First, there is a helpful chart showing a thwart index of the mushrooms and the targeted therapeutic effects of each, which is worth the modest price of the book all by itself. The chart is copyrighted by the author and states that it is not to be duplicated or redistributed without permission.
Second, there are listings for each of 17 mushroom, which include their Latin names (there are often several), common names; distribution and surroundings, known active constituents, the form of the mushroom used, and medicinal properties. The listing for each mushroom concludes with a section called “comments,” which contains a discussion of who has studied it for what medicinal properties, with what consequences and when, as well as Native American uses and ancient uses and anything else the author finds fascinating about the mushroom.
Third, there are questions from readers and answers. One of the questions is who recommends mushrooms? The resolution includes list of doctors, including Andrew Weil, M.D. That’s who turned this reviewer on to the the mushroom immune tonic of the book’s author, Paul Stamets.
Fourth, there is a excellent bibliography.
Fifth, there is a small glossary.
Last, there is an index, which may possibly be better. But this is a minor flaw in an otherwise outstanding book.
Paul Stamets is probably the most well-read and experienced mushroom person in the United States. This book reflects the best of his learning and craft.
It should be on the shelf of everyone who takes mushroom products for medicinal purposes, or grows them or who is thought about doing either.
Rating: 5 / 5
Paul Stamets, the world-reknown mycologist, entrepreneur, and eco-activist, can arguably be called the premiere authority on edible mushrooms, both gourmet and medicinal. The attention to detail that he has brought to all of his books on mushroom encouragement are highly visible in this informative pamphlet on medicinal mushrooms. The nine medicinal mushrooms presented in the booklet represent the better known, researched and characterized varieties and are but a sampling of the vast array of the known and potential mycomedicinal pharmacopoiea.
This forty-six page booklet gives brilliant background on several of the better known edible, gourmet mushrooms which also have therapeutic potential, such as shiitake, maitake, and other exotic mushrooms. After a brief introduction which makes a strong case for the incorporation of medicinal mushrooms in the diet, the booklet places the nine mushrooms featured in the book into four distinct categories- Polypores (4), Gilled Mushrooms (3), Teethed Fungi (1), and insect parasitizing mushrooms (1). Each category contains a brief introduction which summarizes in general terms the history, folklore, corporal and medicinal properties and therapeutic uses of the members of the category. From there, the booklet then goes on to describe in copious detail each member of the category by including in rank on its medicinal properties, principal (bio-)active constituents, the form in which it is used, and additional comments on the mushroom that give more detail on things such as history, varieties, encouragement methods, and Stamets’ anecdotal experience with the mushroom.
Although quite small, the booklet is heavily referenced, and in fact, more than half of the text is devoted to references primarily focusing on clinical trials of the various mushrooms. Stamets, to his credit, also gives the reader a list of general articles devoted to the topic of medicinal mushrooms, as well as a excellent list of books and journals devoted to the theme of medicinal mushrooms. Surprisingly, he also provides for such a small exposition, a very workable index.
Yet, the copious referencing throughout the text is at once both the booklet’s strength and weakness. On the one hand, the references serve as a excellent jumping-off top for researchers looking to get caught up in the field. On the other hand, the copious referencing interferes with the flow of the text, and at times, so much technical jargon is used (and not properly defined, I might add), that it nearly feels like one is reading a research paper that is being submitted to a journal devoted to some sort of rocket science. Even as laypeople may zero in on some key points, I judge most of what he says about the therapeutic properties may be lost to them. Although Stamets has place together an in rank-dense pamphlet on glossy paper, future volumes should reconsider some of the pictures, which are adequate, and in some cases eyecatching, but are too small or are not very clear. In addition, his ‘Small Glossary of Terms’ is truly small, and has only eight definitions.
Even as Stamets has succeeded in introducing the topic of medicinal mushrooms to the broadcast (even as, I might add, at the same time not making the tremendous faux paus of saying that ‘mushrooms are plants’, as many lesser writers on the theme have done), he may have unintentionally mislead many uninformed laypeople into believing that the medicinal mushrooms represent some form of ‘one-stop pharmaceutical shopping’. I can easily see and know a situation where some poor soul who is probably taking two or three medications to control his or her arthritis and perhaps many more for a variety of other afflictions, may get the impression that by consuming one or more of these mushrooms, they may possibly obtain immediate relief from their ills. Furthermore, giving Stamets the benefit of the doubt, a cursory review of the references will reveal that many of them are the findings of Chinese, Japanese, and Korean researchers (with a few Germans and Russians thrown in to boot); no doubt that many of the references are not written in English. As excellent do, future editions should note the source language of the materials he quotes, and whether or not it is a translation or an original language document. In addition, even as Stamets is very in the offing about the consequences of the various clinical trials for different mushrooms, he has not given us any in rank on how the trials were conducted. Future editions of this booklet should also endeavor to give the reader this crucial piece(s) of in rank.
Finally, given the immense quantity of data, timeliness and importance of this booklet, its current size is simply too small to give the theme its due. This reviewer hopes that Stamets will consider, and ultimately pen, a full-blown book on the theme. In the meantime, non-technical readers that desire more in rank on the theme of medicinal mushrooms should consult Kenneth Jones’s highly informative and well-researched book titled, ‘Shiitake: The Healing Mushroom’.
Rating: 3 / 5