<b>A scientific memoir as gripping as any HBO drama series</b>... Just as she disinters earthy mushrooms and the finest of filaments, so <b>she lays bare the human heart with moving simplicity</b>... It is her gallant mission in the book and in her life - and one essential to combating the climate crisis - to make science more humanly engaged
- Kate Kellaway, Observer
<i><b>Finding the Mother Tree </b></i><b>is the kind of story we need to be telling</b>, a new way of communicating that the world desperately needs to hear... A reminder to listen to our wilder selves, and to remember, with humility, how little we know of the complexities of the natural world
- Tiffany Francis-Baker, Guardian
This book is a testament to Simard's skill as a science communicator. Her research is clearly defined, the steps of her experiments articulated, her <b>astonishing</b> results explained and the implications laid bare: <b>We ignore the complexity of forests at our peril</b>
- Jonathan C. Slaght, The New York Times
A masterwork of <b>planetary significance</b>
Booklist (starred review)
[Simard] is <b>an intellectual force</b>... Simard's results are so revolutionary and controversial that they have quickly worked their way into social theory, urban planning, culture and art... We have a lot of rethinking to do about the economic and political models that, since Darwin, have been taken to be natural
- Kate Brown, Independent
<i><b>Finding the Mother Tree</b></i><b> has come at a crucial moment</b>... With biodiversity on a knife edge, the need to appreciate and understand the complexity and brilliance of the natural world could not be more important
- Rosie Boycott, Financial Times
Vivid and inspiring... a radical new understanding of plants
- Eugenia Bone, Wall Street Journal
Speaking with Simard felt like coming to the headwaters of a vast system of ideas, both innovative and ancient... To read <i>Finding the Mother Tree</i> is to imagine the view from a 250-foot redwood. The recognition that we're all connected is one of the great gifts of the memoir
Los Angeles Times
<b>[Suzanne Simard] forever transformed our views of the world</b> and the interconnectivity of our environment. <i>Finding the Mother Tree</i> is not only a <b>deeply beautiful</b> memoir about one woman's impactful life, it's also a call to action to protect, understand and connect with the natural world
- Amy Adams,
A <b>vivid and compelling</b> memoir of [Simard's] lifelong quest to prove that the forest is more than just a collection of trees
The New York Times
THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER
'A scientific memoir as gripping as any HBO drama series' Kate Kellaway, Observer
A dazzling scientific detective story from the ecologist who first discovered the hidden language of trees
No one has done more to transform our understanding of trees than the world-renowned scientist Suzanne Simard. Now she shares the secrets of a lifetime spent uncovering startling truths about trees: their cooperation, healing capacity, memory, wisdom and sentience.
Raised in the forests of British Columbia, where her family has lived for generations, Professor Simard did not set out to be a scientist. She was working in the forest service when she first discovered how trees communicate underground through an immense web of fungi, at the centre of which lie the Mother Trees: the mysterious, powerful entities that nurture their kin and sustain the forest.
Though her ground-breaking findings were initially dismissed and even ridiculed, they are now firmly supported by the data. As her remarkable journey shows us, science is not a realm apart from ordinary life, but deeply connected with our humanity.
In Finding the Mother Tree, she reveals how the complex cycle of forest life - on which we rely for our existence - offers profound lessons about resilience and kinship, and must be preserved before it's too late.