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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Overstory: A Novel (originale 2018; edizione 2019)di Richard Powers (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaIl sussurro del mondo di Richard Powers (2018)
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. I confess: I have been known to salute, bow down to or hug a tree. And apropos to Earth Day, last April I finished this sweeping novel about trees and how they’ve shaped our world, how they network to share abundance or protect each other when resources are scarce, how they signal to animals for help and otherwise endure (for now) despite our systemic over-consumption. The Overstory is an epic read, a saga rich in characters that could have walked right out of The Odyssey or a Dickens novel. While this is a work of fiction, the information presented about trees is based on science. As someone who grew up in the middle of an orchard, it’s astounding how little I know about trees. This book made me want to learn more. A treasure of a read, The Overstory has staying power and is very much worth your time. I loved entering the world of trees through this multi-character narrative. I'm guessing the weave of the stories, their outstretched branches and roots, served as a metaphor in its own right to the complex lives of trees and forests. I took off one star because I wish it were 150 pages shorter, as I felt like I had to slog through a hefty portion. But finishing it felt pretty incredible. It was heartbreaking. Finally, I wanted to read the fictional character Patricia Westerford's book "The Secret Forest" which sounded spectacular. Fortunately there is the real book "The Hidden Life of Trees" to look forward to.
“Literary fiction has largely become co-opted by that belief that meaning is an entirely personal thing,” Powers says. “It’s embraced the idea that life is primarily a struggle of the individual psyche to come to terms with itself. Consequently, it’s become a commodity like a wood chipper, or any other thing that can be rated in terms of utility.” [...] “I want literature to be something other than it is today,” Powers says. “There was a time when our myths and legends and stories were about something greater than individual well-being. " Acquiring tree consciousness, a precondition for learning how to live here on Earth, means learning what things grow and thrive here, independently of us. We are phenomenally bad at experiencing, estimating, and conceiving of time. Our brains are shaped to pay attention to rapid movements against stable backgrounds, and we’re almost blind to the slower, broader background drift. The technologies that we have built to defeat time—writing and recording and photographing and filming—can impair our memory (as Socrates feared) and collapse us even more densely into what psychologists call the “specious present,” which seems to get shorter all the time. Plants’ memory and sense of time is utterly alien to us. It’s almost impossible for a person to wrap her head around the idea that there are bristlecone pines in the White Mountains of California that have been slowly dying since before humans invented writing. Premi e riconoscimentiMenzioniElenchi di rilievo
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML: A monumental novel about reimagining our place in the living world, by one of our most "prodigiously talented" novelists (New York Times Book Review). The Overstory unfolds in concentric rings of interlocking fable that range from antebellum New York to the late twentieth-century Timber Wars of the Pacific Northwest and beyond. An air force loadmaster in the Vietnam War is shot out of the sky, then saved by falling into a banyan. An artist inherits a hundred years of photographic portraits, all of the same doomed American chestnut. A hard-partying undergraduate in the late 1980s electrocutes herself, dies, and is sent back into life by creatures of air and light. A hearing-and speech-impaired scientist discovers that trees are communicating with one another. These and five other strangers, each summoned in different ways by trees, are brought together in a last and violent stand to save the continent's few remaining acres of virgin forest. There is a world alongside ours??vast, slow, interconnected, resourceful, magnificently inventive, and almost invisible to us. This is the story of a handful of people who learn how to see that world and who are drawn up into its unfolding catastrophe. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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Side note: It was reading this book that made me realize that trees are the liberal "unborn." Conservatives have their "babies" to save, and that helps them ignore the real suffering of real people, liberals have their tress. ( )