Overstory, Go Plant a Tree

Time. The concept differs based on one’s perspective. Ants. Humans. Trees. God. Does your life span, minutes to decades, change how you think? And if time were infinite, how would you respond? While reading the Overstory, I considered how we grow, love, and view the world can change based on our own unique perspective. Did you grow up on the far side of the world in a small village? Go to college? Live on a farm?

But I suppose none of that matters as this is a book about trees. How they fight for life, socialize with their fellow seedlings, and communicate to those under their watch, including ourselves. They do this over centuries. Time an infinite loop.

That’s the meta genius of Richard Powers. He writes characters I want to hope for and places them in a setting revolving around the ever almost omniscient presence of forests and trees. An American Chestnut Tree on a family farm. A scientist trying to understand the intertwined rain forest. And the most compelling tale in the book? A quadriplegic trying to communicate with his estranged wife. So close, yet so far away.

Typically, I take notes as I read on a Kindle, but I went back to the tried and true hardback format. I read this book months ago, but parts of the story remain vivid:

Read this book:

At the close, I’ll never look at a tree the same way, and, more importantly, I planted multiple in my backyard (and took one large one out of the ground). Call me a tree hugger, spreading the love of the million tree challenge. So, read this book and change your life. Powers cast a vision. When you’re done, plant a tree. You’ll be glad you did.

Don’t take my word as gospel, read other reviews for Power’s opus:

#Book Reviews #Overstory #Richard Powers #Trees #Writing
Underwood 5 Stories