A spectacularly illustrated journey into the intimate communities that native trees share with animals, insects, fungi, and microbes
You can tell a lot about a tree from the company it keeps. James Nardi guides you through the innermost unseen world that trees share with a wondrous array of creatures. With their elaborate immune responses, trees recruit a host of allies as predators and parasites to defend against uninvited advances from organisms that chew on leaves, drain sap, and bore into wood. Microbial life thrives in the hidden spaces of leaf scales, twigs, and bark, while birds, mammals, and insects benefit from the more visible resources trees provide. In return, animals help with pollination, seed dispersal, and recycling of nutrients. The Hidden Company That Trees Keep blends marvelous storytelling with beautiful illustrations and the latest science to reveal how the lives of trees are intertwined with those of their diverse companions.
Politics, geopolitics, economics, books, culture, ideas, science, history, tech, data... Become a subscriber: https://t.co/QTtdVUzLws
Book of the Day: Mark Cocker reviews James B Nardi's, The Hidden Company That Trees Keep. “Their complex web of interactions defies a facile understanding of how all these lives are intertwined.” https://t.co/Aso79fHOFz
Princeton University Press is a leading independent publisher of trade and scholarly books, inspiring brilliant conversations with bold ideas.
Looking for your first read of 2023? The @StarTribune lists The Hidden Company That Trees Keep on their list of Nonfiction to watch for in 2023. Check out the book when it publishes February 7th! https://t.co/4h0kiqict7
Tom Gatti is a writer and editor.
“Trees are not only in a state of perpetual communion, but also – and here’s the strongest political message in this studiously apolitical book – utterly dependent on a sharing process.” @MarkCocker2 on James B Nardi’s The Hidden Company that Trees Keep https://t.co/ATZexpLhhs