I will disclose at the start that I have met Gary Paul Nabhan and that Miguel Altieri (who wrote one of the two forwards) was a graduate student at the same time I was a postdoctoral student at the University of Florida. Both of us were being directed in our work by the late Willard Whitcomb. I spent some time at Miguel's agricultural plots and was impressed by his work. I have read or skimmed a few of Nabhan's books and was equally impressed by his depth of knowledge of native plants. "Enduring Seeds" is certainly up to his high standards.
We really don't hear much of native agriculture, apart from corn, and yet the Native American cropping system was much more complex, including not only maize (corn), but its companions beans and squash, as well as amaranth, sunflowers, cranberries, blueberries and pecans, and a number of crop plants now lost to us. As Nabhan points out the Hohokam had probably the most complex agriculture in North America with large irrigation systems and many crops, including some now not seen north of Mexico. The irrigation system they developed worked well for about 150 years and then drought and salting out, followed by floods, caused serious disruptions. Within a few hundred years they had abandoned their land. Snaketown, where Phoenix now stands, went from a thriving community of over 1000 to dry desert. Now Phoenix is copying Snaketown in an even bigger way as probably one of the least sustainable cities in the United States.
In "Enduring Seeds" Gary Paul Nabhan has delved deeply into the history to which we should pay more attention, instead of the emphasis on wars (although they certainly had their impacts). It is the history of the systems that sustain civilization that is at least as important as which general won which battle. It is also a fascinating story and Nabhan has captured it well in his book. He has also explained why, from a number of standpoints, we need to maintain the biodiversity of the planet, especially in crop plants. I urge anyone who has a stake in the future (and that is all of us) to consider reading this important volume. You will not be disappointed.