The tree collectors : tales of arboreal obsession
(2024)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
580.922/STEWART,A

0 Holds on 1 Copy

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Adult Nonfiction 580.922/STEWART,A Due: 2/12/2026

Details

PUBLISHED
New York : Random House, [2024]
©2024
EDITION
First edition
DESCRIPTION

xxvii, 304 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9780593446850, 0593446852 :, 0593446852, 9780593446850
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Healers -- Ecologists -- Artists -- Curators -- Educators -- Community builders -- Enthusiasts -- Seekers -- Preservationists -- Visionaries

"The Japanese practice of forest bathing, shinrin-yoku, changes the levels of stress and pleasure hormones in the body, decreasing cortisol and increasing serotonin. Tree collectors know this. And if being around one tree feels good, their thinking goes, imagine how a hundred trees would feel. In her first botanical nonfiction in more than a decade, Amy Stewart brings us on a captivating tour of tree collectors around the world asking: what drives one to collect something as enormous, majestic, and deeply-rooted as a tree? In her gentle, intimate, slyly humorous way, Stewart brings these people to life, organizing their stories into categories. There are the community builders--like Shyam Sunder Paliwal who, after the death of his daughter, began a movement in his Rajasthan village to plant 111 trees whenever a girl was born--who do the remarkable work of knitting people together under an arboreal canopy. There are seekers who have taken their passion for trees around the world, or even into space. There are visionaries--the former poet laureate, W.S. Merwin, who planted a tree a day for over three decades, until he had turned a barren estate into a palm sanctuary. And there are healers--like Joe Hamilton, who plants trees on land passed down to him by his formerly enslaved great-grandfather--who have found a way to heal their own lives, the lives of others, or even wounds of the past, by planting trees"--