This eclectic collection of essays treats nomadism and mobile populations around the globe, ranging across Senegal, Italy, Mongolia, Israel, Australia, Corsica, and Russian Siberia; one chapter even explores the ways NASA missions functioned as laboratories for nutrition in long-range space exploration. Thematically and topically interesting, the chapters link specific nomadic practices to food cultures within the context of globalization and late modernity. This collection takes a very wide view of what can be counted as nomadism: transnational, tourist, and migratory mobility are all covered under the same umbrella term. . . this has the advantage of pointing out certain similarities between different forms as they exist, have existed, or can be imagined to exist. . . these chapters will likely be useful in anthropology, migration, food studies, and food security courses; in classes covering specific populations and/or geographic areas; and those covering the forms of mobility mentioned above. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through graduate students; professionals.