Pathless Forest : The Quest to Save the World's Largest Flowers
Pathless Forest : The Quest to Save the World's Largest Flowers
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Author(s): Thorogood, Chris
ISBN No.: 9781802062427
Pages: 288
Year: 202503
Format: UK-B Format Paperback (Trade Paper)
Price: $ 21.55
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

A gripping, Technicolor account-- Guardian Over the years, Rafflesia has bewitched botanists - its very elusiveness adding to its mystique. For Thorogood, who already specialised in parasitic plants, it became the apex of them all. He was Captain Ahab; this was his own great white--Tom Whipple, The Times Rafflesia [is] one of the strangest and most gruesome plants on the planet . In his flamboyant account, Thorogood has produced a book as highly coloured as the plant itself--Kate Teltscher, Spectator A love letter to the largest flowers in the world: the monstrous blooms of Rafflesia . a relationship that echoes the monomania of any Werner Herzog antihero . like its subject, his prose is undemure, supersized, unbound by convention--Rachel Aspden, Guardian A vivid account of this gruelling expedition, combined with his fierce determination to find the pungent plants that have obsessed him for decades-- Daily Mail Thorogood's dazzling descriptions light up the faraway forests with an impassioned commitment--Sophy Roberts, TLS Chris Thorogood is a self-described 'plant junkie'. The plant on which he is hooked is a bizarre one called Rafflesia , a parasitic monster found growing only in the Philippines and Indonesia and notable for its enormous, fleshy blossom. Pathless Forests is a sort of travelogue describing Thorogood's journey around this part of the world in search of the beasts in bloom .


has all the hallmarks of adventure: nearly drowning in a river, scaling cliffs while dangling on lainas, being bitten by giant ants and stung by toxic trees . But it was worth it . and he also makes a serious broader point. Rafflesia . are threatened and on the edge of extinction. For all their strangeness, the very rarity of these gigantic living objects symbolises our continuing carelessness towards nature--Charles Elliott, Literary Review.


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