User Profile

Plantarum

plantarum@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 months ago

I'm a botanist in Ottawa Canada. I like SciFi, literary fiction, historical fiction. I'm particularly interested in reading books from new (to me) perspectives, and stories that address hope, resistance, and community.

You can also find me at ottawa.place/@plantarum

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2025 Reading Goal

75% complete! Plantarum has read 9 of 12 books.

M. R. Carey: Fellside (Paperback, Orbit)

Spooky, sad, but ultimately optimistic take on humans dealing with adversity

Listened to the audiobook, narrated by Finty Williams, over the course of a couple of long summer road trips.

An interesting and engaging book! It applies the setting of a women's prison in England to a meditation on death, injustice, and our obligations to ourselves and each other. It has a strong supernatural element, but most of the characters and plot points are grounded in the 'real world'.

The only thing criticism that I have is that the main character undergoes a very dramatic change of perspective at the beginning of the book. She starts out as an unfocused and disengaged woman with serious drug addictions. Her transformation to a highly-principled protagonist feels like it warrants a bit more interrogation that it received here.

Still, recommended, particularly for fans of Carey's other works.

M. R. Carey: Fellside (Paperback, Orbit)

Listened to the audiobook, narrated by Finty Williams, over the course of a couple of long summer road trips.

An interesting and engaging book! It applies the setting of a women's prison in England to a meditation on death, injustice, and our obligations to ourselves and each other. It has a strong supernatural element, but most of the characters and plot points are grounded in the 'real world'.

The only thing criticism that I have is that the main character undergoes a very dramatic change of perspective at the beginning of the book. She starts out as an unfocused and disengaged woman with serious drug addictions. Her transformation to a highly-principled protagonist feels like it warrants a bit more interrogation that it received here.

Still, recommended, particularly for fans of Carey's other works.

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Riley Black: When the Earth Was Green (2025, St. Martin's Press)

A gorgeously composed look at the longstanding relationship between prehistoric plants and life on Earth …

A look at the evolutionary history of plants.

A fascinating book that the traces the evolution of plants and the relationship plants have with animals, via a series of vignettes that look at the life of plants and animals at different periods of time. An appendix of information is also given to provide the scientific background to the vignettes, followed by a list of references.

While fossils of animals (especially dinosaurs) fascinate the public and are the usual 'stars' of palaeontology, plants are the ones that fuel those bodies directly or indirectly. Without plants, there would be no animals, and plants determine what kinds of animals can exist in areas of the world. So it is worthwhile to get an understanding of how plants evolved to understand more of the world that prehistoric animals inhabit.

Our first stop is at the beginning, when the first plants appeared. At some point in time, single-celled organisms in an ocean swallowed …