Richard Powers is the author of twelve novels, most recently The Overstory. He is the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and the National Book Award, and he has been a Pulitzer Prize and four-time National Book Critics Circle Award finalist. He lives in the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains.
Librarian note: There is more than one author with this name in the Goodreads database.
A monumental novel about trees and people by one of our most "prodigiously talented" (The New York Times Book Review) novelists.
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 four, 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.
In his twelfth novel, National Book Award winner Richard Powers delivers a sweeping, impassioned novel of activism and resistance that is also a stunning evocation of―and paean to―the natural world. From the roots to the crown and back to the seeds, The Overstory unfolds in concentric rings of interlocking fables that range from antebellum New York to the late twentieth-century Timber Wars of the Pacific Northwest and beyond, exploring the essential conflict on this planet: the one taking place between humans and nonhumans. 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.
The Overstory is a book for all readers who despair of humanity’s self-imposed separation from the rest of creation and who hope for the transformative, regenerating possibility of a homecoming. If the trees of this earth could speak, what would they tell us? "Listen. There’s something you need to hear."
10% into the book I felt this would be the kind of books that a reader fascinated with trees should like, but somewhere in my mind there was a strange reservation, a suspicion that the author may not deliver on the promises. 30% into the book I was disappoi...
评分10% into the book I felt this would be the kind of books that a reader fascinated with trees should like, but somewhere in my mind there was a strange reservation, a suspicion that the author may not deliver on the promises. 30% into the book I was disappoi...
评分10% into the book I felt this would be the kind of books that a reader fascinated with trees should like, but somewhere in my mind there was a strange reservation, a suspicion that the author may not deliver on the promises. 30% into the book I was disappoi...
评分10% into the book I felt this would be the kind of books that a reader fascinated with trees should like, but somewhere in my mind there was a strange reservation, a suspicion that the author may not deliver on the promises. 30% into the book I was disappoi...
评分10% into the book I felt this would be the kind of books that a reader fascinated with trees should like, but somewhere in my mind there was a strange reservation, a suspicion that the author may not deliver on the promises. 30% into the book I was disappoi...
普利策打卡
评分Contrived and cliched.
评分普利策打卡
评分A calming book. A book that occasionally spills out wisdom of value, almost seemingly unintentionally. A book that relates me to something much bigger. Its grand, infinite shadow warmed my soul by making other things insignificant.
评分如同一部献给树木的厚重的忏悔书 各个人物交织一起呼应着完成的悲歌。比起人物情节,对树木内在的力量描述更为深入。单词好难。
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