2 minute read
Être un chêne. Sous l’écorce de Quercus
11.5 × 21.7 cm 320 pages 20 black and white illustrations softback february 2021 retail price: 22 €
rights sold to italy (contrasto)
Laurent Tillon is head of biodiversity at the National Forestry Office in charge of drawing up inventories of forest fauna, especially mammals and batrachians. As a specialist in bats he also closely observes their own woodland presence. He lives in the heart of Rambouillet Forest and has already published the popular Et si on écoutait la nature ? (Payot, 2018) which delighted readers throughout France. Laurent Tillon is a passionate public speaker who loves sharing his subjects of predilection.
Sous l’écorce de Quercus
BEING AN OAK
Under the bark of Quercus
Laurent Tillon
What would trees tell us if we listened to them? Following his first book Et si on écoutait la nature ?, Laurent Tillon continues his exploration of the forest. To him, the forest speaks and he listens. In this work his attention has been drawn to the story of one particular English oak growing in Rambouillet forest to the south of Paris that he has named “Quercus” after the Latin name for the species. Allying the naturalist sensibilities he developed in his teenage years to recent scientific discoveries, the author has, for the first time, been able to write a biography for this majestic tree in the prime of its life. At 230 years old, it stands head and shoulders above the other trees in the forest. If allowed the freedom to grow, it could develop even further and flourish over centuries to come. The older it gets the more the biodiversity living in its branches, trunk and roots complexifies. Gradually it has become the patriarch of the forest. We share the suspense of its existence and its highly eventful lifestory. We also get to meet a colorful, humorous and endearing bestiary of flora and fauna whose lives interact with the oak from the invaluable invisible fungi scattered over its envelope to the stags, wolves, longhorn beetles and field mice, among others, that frequent it. Although apparently perfectly immobile, Quercus weaves steadfast ties with all the inhabitants of the forest, relationships of predation naturally but also cooperation in which alliances are formed at every level from the ground up to the canopy. Quercus grew its first leaves at the time of the French Revolution in heath land unimaginable today. It gives us clues to the tumultuous story of mankind through our complex and ambiguous relationship to trees.
From its status as royal forest, reserved for the entertainment of the court to our more ecologically aware age, Laurent Tillon tells an empathetic tale of the emergence and evolution of a sensitive living entity.
By a fortune of timing, Être un chêne is being published at the same time as Je est un nous by Jean-Philippe Pierron, with which it has many similarities. The book is yet another concrete illustration of the close relationship between human and non-human lives, and a perfect example of the ecobiography of a plant.