May 2021 Book, The Overstory
Book discussion: May 19 at 6:30. Talk About Books meets every third Wednesday of the month at 6:30. "Trees do most of the things you do, just
more slowly. They compete for their livelihoods and take care of their
families, sometimes making huge sacrifices for their children. They
breathe, eat and have sex. They give gifts, communicate, learn, remember
and record the important events of their lives. With relatives and
non-kin alike they cooperate, forming neighborhood watch committees — to
name one example — with rapid response networks to alert others to a
threatening intruder. With a life span of hundreds or thousands of years, time must
surely have a different feel about it.And for all that, trees are things
to us, good for tables, floors and ceiling beams: As much as we might
admire them, we’re still happy to walk on their hearts. It may register
as a shock, then, that trees have lives so much like our own. All the
behaviors described above have been studied and documented by scientists
who carefully avoid the word “behavior” and other anthropomorphic language, lest they be accused of having emotional attachments to their subjects.
The novelist suffers no such injunction, but most of them don’t know beans about botany. Richard Powers is the exception, and his monumental novel accomplishes what few living writers from either camp, art or science, could attempt. Using the tools of story, he pulls readers heart-first into a perspective so much longer-lived and more subtly developed than the human purview that we gain glimpses of a vast, primordial sensibility, while watching our own kind get whittled down to size."
Excerpt from New York Times book review by Barbara Kingsolver, April 2019

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