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Powers the overstory
Powers the overstory












powers the overstory

Filled with the pain of the world's development in recent decades, I had grown ready for this book. "They kill us a bit and make us change."Īnd that is precisely what happened to me while I read The Overstory.

powers the overstory

"What do stories do?" This is what one character asks at a crossroads. And I felt it made such perfect sense - my tiny gardening project connected to my vast reading life, growing side by side as long as I am around to think and feel. I don't know, but I took a picture, imagining while I did so that I was Nick, owner of a family's collected photographic memory of a chestnut tree planted where they usually do not grow. This year, I have already checked that they are still alive, and I can see there will be more leaves. Then we had five or six leaves on each of the three tiny chestnut trees - growing in slow motion (human time perception). The following year, we saw a few single sticks with a leaf each coming out of the soil. My daughter and I collected chestnuts one autumn and put some of them into a corner of our garden. My fence is made of wood, and my garden holds an oak tree, an acorn, three apple trees, plum trees, three cherry trees (plus a baby cherry trying to make it), AND my garden holds a three-year-old chestnut experiment. I wonder at the kind of trees that frame my paintings. Wondering how old the oak trees were that turned into the logs that made it into my wooden house, to turn into beloved bookshelves. Wondering which ones became the cherry tree desk my grandfather made for me. Wondering which trees grew to become the books on my shelves.

powers the overstory

I sit in silence, holding the paperback copy of The Overstory in my hands, thinking of trees. To hope, which finds roots in the most infertile of soils! Cheers, my friends on our shared planet!














Powers the overstory