Dispersals, Jessica J. Lee
Dispersals, Jessica J. Lee
List: $15.99 | Sale: $11.20
Club: $7.99

Dispersals
On Plants, Borders, and Belonging

Author: Jessica J. Lee

Narrator: Jessica J Lee

Unabridged: 5 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/09/2024


Synopsis

A prize-winning memoirist and nature writer turns to the lives of plants entangled in our human world to explore belonging, displacement, identity, and the truths of our shared future

A seed slips beyond a garden wall. A tree is planted on a precarious border. A shrub is stolen from its culture and its land. What happens when these plants leave their original homes and put down roots elsewhere?

In fourteen essays, Dispersals explores the entanglements of the plant and human worlds: from species considered invasive, like giant hogweed; to those vilified but intimate, like soy; and those like kelp, on which our futures depend. Each of the plants considered in this collection are somehow perceived as being "out of place"—weeds, samples collected through imperial science, crops introduced and transformed by our hand. Combining memoir, history, and scientific research in poetic prose, Jessica J. Lee meditates on the question of how both plants and people come to belong, why both cross borders, and how our futures are more entwined than we might imagine.

About Jessica J. Lee

Jessica J. Lee is a British-Canadian-Taiwanese author, environmental historian, and winner of the Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction, the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature, the Banff Mountain Book Award, and the RBC Taylor Prize Emerging Writer Award. She is the author of Turning, Two Trees Make a Forest, and the children's book A Garden Called Home, and coeditor of the essay collection Dog Hearted. She is the founding editor of the Willowherb Review and teaches creative writing at the University of Cambridge. She lives in Berlin.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Krista on December 07, 2023

What the records tell us is this: human desire is a powerful thing. It is also ephemeral, lost in the moment it is felt, though its traces remain in the world long after. From a swelled root to a crinkled leaf: in the plants we eat, there are remnants of our search for the medicinal and the palat......more

Goodreads review by Shannon on April 08, 2024

A collection of essays that explores the intersections between the author's personal family history with that of a number of different plant varieties as well as the way these plants can be related to the history of places and their migration patterns (not that dissimilar to human migrants). At time......more

Goodreads review by urooba on March 08, 2024

a quick read and much more plant history/culture based over storytelling than Unearthing was. so, so incredibly beautiful.......more