Covering almost 8 percent of the earth's terrain, lichens are living beings which are familiar to everyone, known to no one. They are one of those organisms that seem to offer nothing to hold our gaze. But the more time we spend with lichens, the more they reveal their beauty, their mysteries and their strange power of attraction. Part-algae and part-fungus, lichens call into question our customary ways of classifying forms of life, and allow us to conceive of an ecology that is no longer based on distinctions between nature and culture, urban and rural, competition and cooperation. The result of several years of investigation carried out on several different continents, this remarkable book offers an original, radical, and, like its subject matter, symbiotic reflection on this common but mostly invisible form of life, blending cultures and disciplines, drawing on biology, ecology, philosophy, literature, poetry, even graphic art. What if lichens were at the heart of some of the most pressing and topical questions of our day? Does the fact that they can live everywhere, even in very harsh environments, that they persist when almost all other traces of life have disappeared, mean that, despite their fragility, lichens are a force of resistance? After reading this book you will never see lichens, or the world, in the same way again.
A book I hoped existed, that gave me great hopes for the treasures it would contain (and lived up to it!!), a book that makes me happy to be alive and around to read it. My book is now stripey blue and white and my highlighter has travelled miles along its words.
It's a book that defies categorisation, part philosophy, part art, part history, part literature, part science, part poetry. To be sipped not sculled, it's like a literary port :)
It is also a beautiful compilation and reference guide for lichen thinkers and artists. I often lamented the lack of lichen art and literature but there is tonnes, especially in other languages. Extracts from other texts are included all throughout but Zonca adds his own insights, too. A perfect medley.
I cannot overstate how much I loved this book. If I could give it ten stars I would.
Bear in mind, when buying this book, that there is very little science involved in its narrative. It is almost entirely thoughts on philosophy and poetry that relate, sometimes quite loosely, to lichen. Maybe this book is more than two stars, but I was expecting to learn about the biology and ecology of lichen (and I didn't).
DNF. I was expecting actual scientific information, there is little science in this book. Its full of fluffy philosophical thoughts and soooo many quotes. The amount of excerpts in this book is crazy, not much original content.
Reading for the scientific information, I skipped a lot of the literature quotations. Which was most of the book. When it did contain actual fact, it was very interesting.