Book description
The Overstory, winner of the 2019 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction, is a sweeping, impassioned work 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, Richard Powers's twelfth novel unfolds in concentric rings of…
Why read it?
38 authors picked The Overstory as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
This sweeping epic of the relationship between ourselves and the natural world is not only amazing, it is breathtaking in its breadth and ambition. Weaving together the story threads of nine character whose lives have been deeply affected by trees and forests, the non-linear narratives join the nine from their initial captivations with nature to their political empowerment as they eventually join forces as activists. The writing is in turns beautiful, suspensful, and fascinating, as when two of the characters live on a tree stand an ancient redwood to protect it from loggers. Those passages are nothing less than revelatory.…
I love this book because it changes the way I see the world every single time.
Powers writes with a patience that feels almost radical. I found myself slowing my breathing as I read, realizing how little I notice in the rush of daily life. I love how he blurs the line between human and nature, reminding me that we’re never outside the system—we are the system.
The Overstory humbles me, and because humility, to me, is where clarity begins.
From Alison's list on helping you make sense of change amidst wild ambiguity.
This is a story of activism, following nine main characters and their shared commitment to protecting the forests and the trees.
My favourite thing about this book is its representation of diversity. The narrative highlights the varied experiences of people from all backgrounds, and yet those vastly different people join together in pursuit of a central environmental goal.
I think this book really stands as a call to action, a reminder that environmental activism is a space for everyone.
From Shannon's list on books about nature and the environment.
If you love The Overstory...
While it took me awhile to get into this book with all the varying characters, I loved the epicness of it. The beauty of weaving in so many different and varied characters to come together, sometimes indirectly, into one big mission for the planet and the trees. It explores so many themes and opinions and versions of reality, but underlying it is the web of connection that lies between all humans, of which trees are so representative. This book is an inspiring piece of epic art.
This book blew me away. I loved how it was told with a range of characters and stories converging into a single whole—like the forest and the trees. I learned more about trees than I ever thought I would care to know and loved every minute of it.
There's nothing more humbling, perhaps, than the vast forests that blanket our planet, and this novel and its unforgettable characters made me feel that in my bones. I'll never look at a tree or planet Earth quite the same way again.
From Dennis' list on transform how we see ourselves in the world.
“The Overstory” by Richard Powers is the best novel EVER written about trees. Full stop. But wait, I can’t stop. After ranging in the novel from the crown to the roots and from the densely forested Northeast to the giants of the Northwest, you will never take a single tree for granted again.
In fact, I’ll wager that, like me, after finishing this book you will go out and apologize to the familiar but ignored creatures that have patiently fed your soul while shading your body.
From Gregory's list on makes you want to enjoy nature and hug trees.
If you love Richard Powers...
I especially loved that this book has the ability to bring together elements as disparate as science, politics, and our common humanity. I repeatedly stopped reading to think about what was written: a depiction of our society and our place at the crossroads of possible futures that will depend on our attitudes to the plants and animals that make up the earth we share.
But the moral core at the center of this novel makes it more than just a good story. I kept thinking that it was easy to imagine Powers’s book as what many people believe is the…
From Steve's list on the invention of nature.
This book forever changed the way that I look at trees. It’s a work of fiction, but elements are inspired by the life and research of ecologist Peter Wohlleben and his amazing discoveries of how trees communicate and cooperate.
It is incredibly well crafted and beautifully woven with ecological research in a digestible way. I admire an author who can weave together so many distinct narratives and lives, including the lives of trees.
It did the rounds in my family. Everybody was reading it across the world at the same time, and we loved chatting about it and discussing how…
From Dillon's list on inspire you to explore the natural world.
So much to learn about trees!
After reading this novel, I discovered Powers’ list of 25 (out of many more) books that influenced him while he was writing the book. Now I have read a significant share of these books too, and I have incorporated fascination and facts in my own writing. This novel, perhaps more than any other I have read, has led me to examine the vast and disturbing question that seems to haunt Powers—our alienation from nature, why? To question this, I feel, suggests a search that may lead to the “new story” our culture needs.
Powers…
From Scott's list on our human relationship with the natural world.
If you love The Overstory...
What’s not to love about a book structured as a tree? This is a vast, episodic novel that takes traditional storytelling and turns it on its head.
A cast of characters connect through stories that grow from seed to trunk to limb. I finished this long read and immediately wanted to start again. It’s the kind of book that rewards a second or third pass. Complex, rife with science and faith and desperate longing, this book is a celebration of the tree, a clarion call to return our attention to our roots before it is too late.
One of Powers’…
From Culley's list on books in which nature is a teacher.
If you love The Overstory...
Want books like The Overstory?
Our community of 12,000+ authors has personally recommended 100 books like The Overstory.