The Treeline : The Last Forest and the Future of Life on Earth
The Treeline : The Last Forest and the Future of Life on Earth
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Rawlence, Ben
ISBN No.: 9781250270238
Pages: 320
Year: 202202
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 41.39
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

One of Booklist ''s Top 10 Environmental Sustainability Book "If I were to choose an epigraph for The Treeline , it would be a sentence Rawlence writes about the delicate ''willow zone habitat'' on Creag Fhiaclach in Inverness-shire, Scotland: ''I thought I was paying attention, but a whole different level of noticing is required." That sentiment accompanies him everywhere. You feel the layering of his heightened noticing throughout the book --his ability to turn over a topographical or biological detail and find on its underside a rune that changes everything. In a sense, he''s emulating the heightened sensitivity of many woodland creatures--reindeer that can see ultraviolet light, wood ants that can taste the differences between tree resins, birds that prefer the resonance of the wood of old-growth trees. And there''s a moral to that sentence--''a whole different level of noticing is required"--that captures the strangeness of the changes happening all around us. As things begin to come apart, we see more clearly the connections that bound them together." -- Verlyn Klinkenborg, The New York Times "Written with refreshingly lovely and occasionally aching prose , the book focuses not on losses but, perversely, on gains: specifically in the northernmost tree line, which for centuries petered out because of extreme cold and inhospitable conditions. Now that tree line is expanding north--an augur, Rawlence explains, for a warming planet.


" -- James Tarmy, Bloomberg " Important. " -- Minneapolis Star Tribune "[A] trip to six boreal forests around the world (Scotland, Scandinavia, Siberia, Alaska, Canada, and Greenland).worth the effort." -- Miami Herald " Compelling, intriguing, and thoroughly engaging . A title of the utmost importance at a time of tremendous peril, The Treeline is a game-changer." -- Booklist (Starred) "Rawlence evokes the natural world in lyrical, delicate prose . A timely, urgent message delivered in graceful fashion." -- Kirkus (Starred) " Eloquent .


Nature lovers and travelers alike will find this a lovely paean to a rapidly changing landscape." -- Publisher''s Weekly "[A] lyrical and passionate book. a sobering, powerful account of how trees might just save the world, as long as we are sensible enough to let them''." -- Mail on Sunday "This clear-headed, perspective-altering book lifts the lid on the changes underway in the largest forest on Earth, and the people facing the brunt of them. Rawlence manages to craft a beautiful and evocative portrait of the natural world . It is essential reading for those hoping to better understand our changing planet." -- The Spectator " [A] sweeping account of the Arctic forest that circles the world in an almost unbroken ring" -- The Financial Times " Rawlence is a fine ecologist and an excellent writer with the rare ability both to tell an absorbing tale and to convey the subtleties of science. Timely, salutary and eminently readable.


Excellent ." -- Resurgence & Ecologist "The book''s many detailed descriptions of the natural world are coupled with contemporary climate science, making the process of learning about the forest''s inner workings both awe-inspiring and ineffably sad ." -- Undark "Absolutely fantastic and devastating." -- Emma Gannon, host of Webby nominated podcast Ctrl Alt Delete "Blends nature, travel and science writing. thought-provoking ." -- Gardens Illustrated "What an extraordinary book this is ! Rawlence writes with elegant clarity about a world knocked out of whack. The Treeline is a fine work of science journalism, an adventure tale that tracks the shifting fortunes of the planet''s northernmost forests, a record of the cruel legacies of capitalism and colonialism . Most of all it is a sustained act of attention, of observing and listening to a land that observes and listens back.


This is not just a description of a warming world but an active invitation to live differently, to participate with wisdom and humility in the cacophonous and ever-unfinished abundance of terrestrial life." -- Ben Ehrenreich, author of Desert Notebooks: A Roadmap for the End of Time " A fascinating book drawing on a brilliant, original line of thinking to reveal the roots and reach of our changing boreal forests. Once again, Rawlence delivers a perfect combination of lyrical writing and rigorous reporting. Utterly illuminating . " -- Sophy Roberts, author of The Lost Pianos of Siberia "In this beautiful homage to the world''s northernmost forests, Ben Rawlence brings the zeal of a journalist and the heart of a naturalist to his journey following the treeline east into the rising sun. As Rawlence explores vast wildwoods of pine, birch, larch, and spruce, he uses alluring prose to present fascinating and challenging ideas of what a forest is: not a static place on a map but a creative, evolutionary process--a "mobile community." Rawlence documents how the treeline is now undergoing one of its greatest transformations with enormous consequences for humanity and the planet. By focusing his formidable curiosity and craft on the arboreal biosphere, Rawlence has given both trees and people an enormous gift .


" -- M.R. O''Connor, author of Wayfinding "Our trees are on the move but we have no place left to go. The Treeline is a moving, thoughtful, deeply reported elegy for our vanishing world and a map of the one to come." -- Nathaniel Rich, author of Losing Earth and Second Nature "Rawlence takes us on an unforgettable personal tour of the major treelines of the Northern Hemisphere. His prophetic insights on how global climate change is rapidly rewriting the boundaries and biodiversity of earth''s boreal forests are colored by the insights of the botanists, glaciologists, and indigenous peoples he met along the way. The Treeline is a page-turner that poetically challenges us to confront the elephant in the room." -- James McClintock, author of Lost Antarctica and A Naturalist goes Fishing " Urgent and insightful tour of some of the world''s strangest, most bewitching and most endangered environments.


A tribute to indigenous wisdom, a paean to the otherworldly beauty of the taiga and the tundra, and a highly readable overview of the latest science. This is an important book , and one I will be pressing into other people''s hands." -- Cal Flyn author of Islands of Abandonment "The very treeline is on the move: a devastating image. This book is an evocative, wise and unflinching exploration of what it will mean for humanity." -- Jay Griffiths, author of A Sideways Look at Time.


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...