Finding the Mother Tree

Discovering How the Forest Is Wired for Intelligence and Healing

hardcover, 368 pages

Published May 4, 2021 by Knopf.

ISBN:
978-0-525-65609-8
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
1176317854

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (13 reviews)

9 editions

Worth the Read

4 stars

For me, this wasn't a fast-moving book, but I did enjoy it. I felt that the extensive details of Simard’s experiments in various forest plots were more technical than I cared for, but I am sure it would appeal to others. Her personal story, interwoven with her scientific work, made for a good reading. Simard's discoveries of the communication process with trees and plant species were fascinating. My main problem with the book was our library loan policies. Since there was a long waitlist for the book, it could be checked out for only two weeks, and if you wanted to renew it, you had to get back on the waitlist (generally six weeks plus). I had to go through several cycles.

Losing disconnection

4 stars

Suzanne Simard is one of the most important figures in 21st Century forest science. She has presented a way of observing and understanding forests that has gradually shifted western thought on the relationship between trees, fungi, and other organisms.

This book is presented as an autobiography, traversing Simard's life. The stories, particularly those of adversity where she struggled to have her radical ideas accepted in forestry and scientific communities, are brilliantly told and very compelling. Some of the writing feels over-coached and as a result doesn't come across as genuine as Simard usually is. Still, the experiments and discoveries are thrilling and brilliantly told as a complete story that makes for a fantastic book.

Review of 'Finding the Mother Tree' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Much more difficult reading than I had expected. This book demands a lot from the reader, and rewards well.

Difficulties... Technically: there's a lot of science, often tightly condensed. Stylistically: the book is a tapestry—okay, okay, I’ll say it: a mycorrhizal network—of memoir, ecology, research, policy, education, inspiration, frustration, hope, and more; context-switching was often jarring, as was remembering all the personae and arborae. Emotionally: ugh; so much bullying from whitemale knowbetter pieceoshits, plus the other difficulties in her life, plus all the omnipresent destruction of trees and forests and ecosystems.

Difficult, finally, on a personal level: I’m deeply hardwired as both a cooperator and a skeptic. Even though I know how her research ends, it’s different when reading about the experiments themselves: I found myself painfully conflicted between rooting for her and finding nits to pick in her experimental design, because intellectual honesty demands stricter rigor when I want …

Review of 'Finding the Mother Tree' on 'Import'

4 stars

Suzanne Simard is one of the most important figures in 21st Century forest science. She has presented a way of observing and understanding forests that has gradually shifted western thought on the relationship between trees, fungi, and other organisms.

This book is presented as an autobiography, traversing Simard's life. The stories, particularly those of adversity where she struggled to have her radical ideas accepted in forestry and scientific communities, are brilliantly told and very compelling. Soome of the writing feels over-coached and as a result doesn't come across as genuine as Simard usually is. Still, the experiments and discoveries are thrilling and brilliantly told as a complete story that makes for a fantastic book.

avatar for ZaneSelvans

rated it

4 stars
avatar for kidagreen

rated it

5 stars
avatar for ajh

rated it

5 stars
avatar for jaymeb

rated it

4 stars
avatar for WorzelFG

rated it

5 stars
avatar for Lavinia

rated it

4 stars