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GARLIC IN CULTURE

According to the Bible, Ancient Egyptians fed garlic to the enslaved people who built the pyramids, to keep them healthy and strong, and when King Tutankhamen's tomb was excavated in 1922, cloves of garlic were found inside.

GARLIC FOR PYRAMID BUILDERS: https://academic.oup.com/jn/article/131/3/951S/4687053 PLINY: https://www.loebclassics.com/view/pliny_elder-natural_history/1938/pb_LCL371.487.xml?readMode=recto

FOODWAYS DIGEST ON GARLIC IN HISTORY https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/digest/article/view/27827/33046 MAGNETS VS GARLIC: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17496977.2019.1648924 https://seeingitclearlynow.com/plant-garlic-health-and-folklore/ https://vitalitymagazine.com/article/garlic-medicine-folklore-traditions-from-the-far-east/

Vanessa Veselka (born March 14, 1969) is an American writer best known for her 2012 PEN / Robert W. Bingham prize prize-winning debut novel Zazen. Her nonfiction has appeared in Salon, The Atlantic, GQ, Maximum Rock'n'Roll, Bitch Magazine, and The American Reader.

In 2013, she was a chosen as a MacDowell Fellow, and her November 2012 GQ piece entitled "The Truck Stop Killer" is part of the 2013 edition of Best American Essays.

Personal life
Veselka's bio says she has been "a teenage runaway, a sex-worker, a union organizer, and a student of paleontology." In the 1990s she played in the bands Bell and The Pinkos and ran a record label. She graduated from Reed College and lives in Portland, Oregon.

Writing
Veselka's novel Zazen was serialized online by Arthur Magazine, then published by Richard Nash's imprint Red Lemonade. The book grew out of a short story published by Tin House in 2010, and was nominated for a Ken Kesey Award for Fiction and awarded the $25,000 PEN/Bingham award "for a debut work of fiction that represents distinguished literary achievement and suggests great promise."

Her nonfiction has dealt with issues of women, violence and the road ("Green Screen," The Truck Stop Killer") as well as rape, mental health ("The Collapsible Woman") and unionization ("the Wake of Protest"). Her fiction frequently involves "Buddhist concerns" and geological themes.

She is currently at work on a new novel.