What readers think of The Overstory, plus links to write your own review.

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The Overstory by Richard Powers

The Overstory

A Novel

by Richard Powers
  • BookBrowse Review:
  • Critics' Consensus (4):
  • Readers' Rating (32):
  • First Published:
  • Apr 3, 2018, 512 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Apr 2019, 512 pages
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Reviews

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There are currently 7 reader reviews for The Overstory
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Cathryn_Conroy

A Book Unlike Any Other I Have Read: Original and Imaginative
I thought this book would be a challenge to read. And it was. But not for the reasons I anticipated. I thought would be big, bulky, and dense. After all, it did with the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction in 2019. And it is big. And little bulky. And somewhat dense. But the challenge I encountered was closing the book so I could deal with real life.

Wow! Just that…wow! This is a book unlike any other I have read.

First, there are stories. So many stories. Gripping, compelling, and captivating stories. Stories I wanted to keep reading to find out more…find out how they continued…and eventually how they ended.

And then there are facts. So many facts. This is one of those novels that is really nonfiction at its core, but it's disguised in the stories so you don't realize at the time how many facts you're learning.

Masterfully and creatively written by Richard Powers, this is the story of trees. Don't let that dissuade you. This is one of the best books you'll ever read. A plot description is far too difficult to write. Instead, we have characters—nine of them—and their stories that define this book. Some of their stories intertwine, as tree roots do deep within the ground, and some only glance upon each other, barely touching, as tree branches do.

The characters:
• Nicholas Hoel: The descendant of men who loved chestnut trees, Nicholas is the last in the line on the family farm in Iowa. And when I say last, I mean it…the last one. He is a talented artist.

• Mimi Ma: The daughter of a Chinese immigrant, Mimi becomes an engineer, but all her genius and business acumen is for naught when a stand of pine trees she loves is destroyed and her life changes forever.

• Adam Appich: A brilliant graduate student, Adam is researching his dissertation in social psychology when his field work encounters a glitch: He crosses over the line.

• Ray Brickman and Dorothy Cazaly: He loves Dorothy. She is fiercely (fiercely!!) independent. But their lives are forever changed with a tragic development.

• Douglas Pavlicek: A Vietnam veteran whose life was quite literally saved by a tree, he becomes incensed when the city is summarily cutting down pine trees for future development.

• Neelay Mehta: This boy genius creates a video game that makes him one of the wealthiest men in the world, but a childhood accident has left him paralyzed. The trees talk to him.

• Patricia Westerford: Hard of hearing, a little odd, but brilliant, she is changing the world with her discovery that trees communicate with each other.

• Olivia Vandergriff: After a near-death experience as a senior in college, Olivia turns into a different person. She hears voices from the trees telling her what to do—and she does it.

This is a novel about trees and their interconnectedness to each other and us. It's impossible to read this book and not look at trees differently. It's impossible to read this multifaceted, original, and imaginative book and not want to immediately plant a tree. Trees are a miracle.
BSG

OMG
Just finished reading this book for the second time. I may master it in another 10. Undoubtedly the biggest book I have ever read - as complex and rich, as giving and demanding, as damning and revelatory, as the overstory and understory themselves. Reading it may not change your life, but it will change the way you look at it, the way you look at it in its natural context, and, perhaps, the way you chart it going forward.
lbrown

The Overstory
An amazing book of natural rediscovery. I'm out in my yard awaiting spring so that I can follow the trails through my little aspen grove, smell the pines, and explore the soil at 9,000' in the Colorado Rockies. I'm on my third read and still discovering things that David Attenborough tried to show me in The Private Lives of Plants almost 25 years ago. The Overstory reawakened my perception of the "real" world outside my own door.
HalJordan

Life changing
I've never read a book that compelled me to come onto the internet and find out what other people thought about it, and to ask questions to better understand its meaning. I won't write a review here of the plot - its well cataloged in many places. Instead - I just wanted to tell you its beyond worth reading. I hope it becomes mandatory reading in high schools soon.
J

Remorse
Reading this book brought a revelation. It also made me very sad that it was not available to read 70 years ago. I grew up in logging country and lived in Humboldt County during the 70s, 80s and 90s when all the timber wars took place. If I had had this book to read then, I would have joined the protestors and 'tree huggers' without reservation. What a mess we humans have made. We just never know when to let well enough alone!
Tom Matamoros

Way Better Than Very Good
Overstory is an exceptional book. Richard Powers deserves to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. He is the smartest and most accomplished American novelist. I recommend all readers of literary fiction read Overstory. I guarantee you will not be disappointed.
Robert Walz

Moral response
This book is challenging to read. I had to re-read so I could fully appreciate the stories of each the main characters. The book also challenges with many underlying issues, issues that go to the survival of these trees and to our own survival. It is a must read for anyone that is concerned about trees or global climate change. Issues around HR 1147 is a-real life example as the Tongass Rainforest is being attacked by the Trump administration.
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