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THE NATION OF PLANTS by Stefano Mancuso

THE NATION OF PLANTS

by Stefano Mancuso translated by Gregory Conti

Pub Date: March 23rd, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-63542-099-9
Publisher: Other Press

A renowned scientist delivers a simple yet urgent call to action on behalf of Earth’s multitude of plants: Use us to save humanity.

As leading plant neurobiologist Mancuso writes, “plants are what make Earth the planet we know. Without them, our planet would very much resemble the images we have of Mars or Venus: a sterile ball of rock.” Sadly, the author demonstrates how humans have inflicted unimaginable damage on all varieties of plants during the short time we have controlled Earth. From deforestation to underestimating the fullness of plant life, humans “behave like children who wreak havoc” because of their “total incomprehension of the rules that govern the existence of a community of living beings.” In this slim but powerful book, which advances similar arguments as The Incredible Journey of Plants and The Revolutionary Genius of Plants, Mancuso responds to this threat by imagining a constitution written by plants, complete with specific articles to serve as the pillars on which plant life rests. Despite the author’s sometimes tongue-in-cheek writing style, which most readers will find refreshing and pleasant, the subject matter is dead serious. Each article of the constitution builds on the idea that plants have brilliantly evolved to thrive through symbiosis with other ecosystems, as opposed to the human tendency to lay waste to them. Mancuso concludes his elegant and cogent argument with straightforward advice accessible to anyone: “There should be just one simple rule: wherever it is possible for a plant to live, there must be one. Unlike many of the alternative proposals, this measure would require only negligible costs, would improve people’s lives in myriad ways, would not demand any revolution in our habits, and would have a great impact on the absorption of carbon dioxide. Let’s defend our forests and cover our cities with plants. The rest will not take long to follow.”

Insightful and arresting, this book offers an achievable road map to a more “radiant future.”