The Wild Trees
Oct. 5th, 2007 09:12 pmI just finished Richard Preston's new non fiction book The Wild Trees about Giant Sequoias.
This may not sound very interesting, but it's suddenly gone into my top ten and has become one of the best books I've ever read. I'm going to insist that
nadriel and any of you other rabid bookworms read it. Why is the book so good? It follows 3 botany students at different times in their lives. Eventually they meet, united by their love of giant trees. Up in the trees is an entirely different world. There are caves, ferns, even other trees growing up in these giants. It's actually incredibly exciting and fast paced reading it, and I love the real life heroes in it. They're all Dungeon and Dragons geeks who are obsessed with their calling. They even name some of the trees after Tolkien characters. I can definitely relate to being so obsessed with a calling that any other career would make you unhappy. Their goal is to find the world's biggest tree and name it.
Okay, I admit it, the book made me cry in several places. It's that good. You just have to read it. It's hard for me to sell a book about trees to anyone, but trust me, it's worth it.

Um, yeah, see all that green stuff? That isn't the ground...


This may not sound very interesting, but it's suddenly gone into my top ten and has become one of the best books I've ever read. I'm going to insist that
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Okay, I admit it, the book made me cry in several places. It's that good. You just have to read it. It's hard for me to sell a book about trees to anyone, but trust me, it's worth it.

Um, yeah, see all that green stuff? That isn't the ground...

