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Winner!
Young Adult Science Book

The
Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring by Richard Preston
(Random House)
SB&F
Review:
Imagine the Hollywood film The Right Stuff and the story
line of that history of the beginnings of the American space program.
Now substitute test pilot Chuck Yeager and the first Project
Mercury astronauts with a group of men and women who sought
the tallest trees (Yeager's Mach 1) and determined to climb them.
Then imagine the small band of growing professional astronauts (from
Friendship 7) reincarnated two to three decades later as a small
band of about the same size who pioneered the climbing of tall trees.
Both stories are "high" adventures, both took intestinal
fortitude, both would see death amongst the practitioners, and both
would continue to tackle their respective Everests with ever-improving
equipment and methods. In The Wild Trees, author Richard
Preston introduces us to, at first, just a few intrepid adventurers,
untrained in botany (or, for that matter, any science), who sought
to both discover and climb the tallest coast redwoods in Northwestern
California (the primary area in which this species is to be found).
As their fascination with the venture grew, so did their desire
to get advanced degrees in the plant sciences and to learn the ways
of the biology of the trees-especially the astonishing new world
of the temperate rain-forest canopy: The astronauts' Moon was hardly
as unknown as forest canopies, redwood or otherwise. From the 1970s
onward, the techniques of tall-tree climbing-the rope systems, the
tools, the tricks of the trade-are all here, carefully laid out
in a historical study. This is less a history of science or a book
purely about science (although we do learn a lot about canopy architecture,
some of its denizens (the lichens that inhabit Sequoia sempervirens,
for instance), and a bit of other biology) than it is a book about
adventure. Although Preston (well known for his hit book The
Hot Zone: The Story of the Ebola Virus (New York: Random House,
1994)) does not write in the same manner as, say, William Beebe
(admittedly of an earlier time and style), The Wild Trees
cannot but help put one in mind of Beebe's Half Mile Down
(New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1951).
Preston tells a similar tale of adventurers 300 feet up, ofttimes
tethered by a single, slender thread not unlike Beebe beneath the
seas-and just as much in danger-as "canopy science" entered
its beginning age. Anyone who can't put down Beebe-or Tom Clancy,
for that matter-must pick up Richard Preston's latest book and discover
the characters (Preston is a master in telling us about the people
who founded tall-tree climbing) and how they taught themselves to
climb the trees (much more demanding than you might imagine). It
is indeed a story about "passion and daring."
About the
author:
Richard Preston is the bestselling author of The Hot Zone, The
Demon in the Freezer, and the novel The Cobra Event.
A writer for the New York Yorker since 1985, Preston is the only
nondoctor to have received the Centers for Disease Control's Champion
of Prevention Award. He also holds an award from the American Institute
of Physics. Preston lives outside New York City.
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