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Fiona Stafford

Autor(a) de The Long, Long Life of Trees

16+ Works 246 Membros 7 Críticas

About the Author

Fiona Stafford is Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Somerville College, Oxford. She has published on a wide range of Romantic literature, and is especially interested in the literacy relationships between England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. She has mostrar mais written several books including Local Attachments: The Province of Poetry (2010) and Brief Lives: Jane Austen (2008), and has edited Wordsworth and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads (2013), as well as novels by Jane Austen and Mary Shelley. mostrar menos

Obras por Fiona Stafford

Associated Works

Pride and Prejudice (1813)algumas edições80,524 exemplares
Emma (1815) — Editor, algumas edições37,916 exemplares
Archipelago: Number Two - Spring 2008 (2008) — Contribuidor — 2 exemplares
Archipelago, Number Nine (Winter 2014) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
Archipelago: Number Twelve (Summer 2019) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
UK

Membros

Críticas

An excellent collection of essays of nature writing, memoir and landscape history. Places that mean something the author are viewed, described and pictured in layers of what is seen, what is felt and what emerges from memory and research. Lanscape prompting thought, meditation, memories and diversions. Nicely done.
 
Assinalado
Steve38 | Apr 2, 2024 |
I picked up this book because I have a friend who is very interested in trees, thinking it might be a good thing to give him as a gift. It is a collection of short pieces, essays really, each covering the natural and social history of a specific tree. I didn't read every chapter, but only the ones that particularly interested me. The author is British, so many of the stories focus on trees found in Britain, but she does a good job describing trees from all over the world. It is well written and nicely illustrated, and even the paper is a very high quality. It was a pleasure to read and will be a pleasure to gift.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
karenchase | 5 outras críticas | Jun 14, 2023 |
Even as I look out of my office window I can see five trees in the immediate vicinity. Two are apple trees in my front garden and there are three small trees across the road on the public space. Along with our feather friends, they are still a part of the natural world that you can still see every day, even in a city; hence why we still feel a deep connection to them and the responses to them being removed in Sheffield from the streets. It is these connections that are deep within our subconscious that Stafford is celebrating. Through seventeen species of trees, including apple, poplar, ash, elm and of course oak, we will learn a little about the folklore, history and use of these trees through the ages.

There is a lot to like about this book, Stafford writes well and has filled it with lots of fascinating facts and snippets about her chosen trees. On top of that, there is lots of art and photos scattered throughout the book. Whilst it was an interesting read, for me though I felt that it lacked depth, but it is a good overview of a number of varieties of trees.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
PDCRead | 5 outras críticas | Apr 6, 2020 |
Received via Abili and NetGalley in exchange for an completely unbiased review.
Also posted on Silk & Serif

The Long, Long Life of Trees was not at all what I expected. I wanted a novel that would cover the historical, cultural and mythological history of trees in a way that would encompass a large variety of trees. The hope was that I would glean information that would make me a hit at parties and give me knowledge about a subject that would be fun to pull out while chatting in the office” “Did you know that the Holly Tree was..?” Unfortunately, The Long, Long Life of Trees was not THAT kind of book and admittedly soured my experience. This novel is all about artistic history of trees: poems, art, literature – it is also about the spiritual and religious connection humans have with trees.

The best part of this novel is the introduction where the author describes trees in a beautiful and lyrical way that honestly took my breath away. The language was strong and emotive. I loved trees for awhile in the way that the author loves them and felt deep wonder at the mysteries that are trees. She developed a narrative that brought the mystical nature of trees to the fore front, while condemning the destruction of forests in a powerful way. If only the book continued on this same vein..

I struggled through this novel because I care very little for art, carving uses and religious imagery curated from various types of trees. I have always had more of a desire to learn the societal and human elements behind nature and unfortunately even the literature component of this novel touched on aspects that, sadly, I could not begin to feel passionate about. I did not learn any neat facts to pull out at dinner parties and I certainly did not enjoy the dry, plodding narrative that followed the inspiring Introductory chapter.

The illustrations, although a wonderful idea, were largely wonderfully hand drawn samples, but I would have very much liked to have had images of fully trees in nature in addition to the author created. I have not seen some of these trees in person as this is a mostly British and European focused work, and would have liked to have a shot of the trees being explored.

Warning: Here There Be Empirical Facts, Mate!

Finally, I think the synopsis was misleading in utilizing words like “inspiring” and “imitate”. The Long, Long Life of Trees is an encyclopedia of trees: practical uses, poetic mentions, religious relevance and their prevalence in famous artwork. This is not a novel about the intimate or inspiring relationship with human mythos and cultural influence, but one of facts. Sadly, this book feels like it was marketed to readers of a different interest, or at least I was expected something different. The Long, Long Life of Trees is not a terrible book, it’s just mislabeled.

This book will appeal to readers who are looking for an empirical, encyclopedic book on trees, are interested in art, poetry and religious relevance of natural phenomenon and are able to read individual entries about European trees written like a textbook rather than through creative and emotional language.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
trigstarom | 5 outras críticas | Jan 1, 2019 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
16
Also by
5
Membros
246
Popularidade
#92,613
Avaliação
½ 4.3
Críticas
7
ISBN
28
Línguas
1

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