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The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession
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The Orchid Thief is Susan Orlean’s tale of an amazing obsession. Determined to clone an endangered flower—the rare ghost orchid Polyrrhiza lindenii—a deeply eccentric and oddly attractive man named John Laroche leads Orlean on an unforgettable tour of America’s strange flower-selling subculture, through Florida’s swamps and beyond, along with the Seminoles who help him and
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Paperback, 284 pages
Published
January 4th 2000
by Ballantine Books
(first published 1998)
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Start your review of The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession

Number one: don't judge this book by the movie Adaptation, which is not a screenplay of the book, but rather a screenplay that contains pieces of the book.
Number two, my favorite quote: "The world is so huge that people are always getting lost in it. There are too many ideas and things and people, too many directions to go. I was starting to believe that the reason it matters to care passionately about something is that it whittles the world down to a more manageable size. It makes the world se ...more
Number two, my favorite quote: "The world is so huge that people are always getting lost in it. There are too many ideas and things and people, too many directions to go. I was starting to believe that the reason it matters to care passionately about something is that it whittles the world down to a more manageable size. It makes the world se ...more

This was originally a piece for The New Yorker, and I think it should've stayed that way. It had its interesting moments but felt a bit bloated and directionless at times. I was expecting something more narrative-based and eccentric like Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Instead every chapter just sort of felt like an essay about something related to the orchid industry, with a very small throughline about John Laroche. 2.5 stars
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Last year I read Susan Orlean’s The Library Book about the history of the Los Angeles Public Library. I found it well done and was able to read it over the better part of a day. I was curious to read more of Orlean’s books, but most of the subject matter was not appealing to me, so I settled on an early work of hers, The Orchid Thief. Later made into a movie called Adaptation, the Orchid Thief takes readers on a journey through a Florida sub-culture of exotic plants. With the weather growing col
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From Investigation, through Article, to Book
This is based on Susan Orelan’s journalistic research in the early 1990s of the orchid obsessive John Laroche, the Seminole tribe he collaborated with, and of orchid collectors and breeders generally. The main plot concerns somewhat inept attempts to steal and clone rare Ghost Orchids to sell on.

Image: Dendrophylax lindenii, the ghost orchid, from Wikipedia
Orlean originally published the story as an article in the New Yorker, but later extended it to ...more
This is based on Susan Orelan’s journalistic research in the early 1990s of the orchid obsessive John Laroche, the Seminole tribe he collaborated with, and of orchid collectors and breeders generally. The main plot concerns somewhat inept attempts to steal and clone rare Ghost Orchids to sell on.

Image: Dendrophylax lindenii, the ghost orchid, from Wikipedia
Orlean originally published the story as an article in the New Yorker, but later extended it to ...more

This all began with a magazine article Orlean was writing about John Laroche, the title character. She headed down to Florida and spent months studying the guy and the environment in which he lived. It is an interesting tale. The book broadens from this introductory piece to cover other things Floridian. She examines the orchid community/sub-culture in considerable detail. There is much there to consider, not only in its contemporary expression but in the history of orchid acquisition and cultiv
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I have not seen the movie Adaption which is based on portions of this book.
I picked up this book because I enjoyed an essay written by the author in The New Yorker. I had found it amusing and perceptive. The book has the feel of an essay, or rather a series of essays focused on the central theme of orchids. Orchid collecting, orchid theft, orchid hunting and orchid obsession are all covered. The writing does go off on tangents. Forays are made into related topics - exploitation of natural resou ...more
I picked up this book because I enjoyed an essay written by the author in The New Yorker. I had found it amusing and perceptive. The book has the feel of an essay, or rather a series of essays focused on the central theme of orchids. Orchid collecting, orchid theft, orchid hunting and orchid obsession are all covered. The writing does go off on tangents. Forays are made into related topics - exploitation of natural resou ...more

When does passion become obsession? Certainly many of the orchid growers and collectors in this book have gone over the line. Set in south Florida, Orlean is brave and relentless in getting her story. She follows the bizarre John LaRoche into the murky swamps of the Fakahatchee Strand State Preserve in search of the elusive ghost orchid. This preserve is home to many alligators, poisonous snakes, sinkholes, and myriad bugs. Ugh! One has to admire her perseverance.
Orlean is an excellent nonfictio ...more
Orlean is an excellent nonfictio ...more

Probably one of the most unique (bizarre?) books I have ever read. Here's the reflection I wrote after I read it:
I know absolutely nothing about plants. Nor do I really have an interest in ever knowing anything about plants. And yet, be that as it may, I found Susan Orlean’s book, The Orchid Thief, fascinating. How can that be?
First off, the book is not like any other book, and definitely not like any other biography, I have read. Upon reading the first chapter, it comes across as a fairly stra ...more
I know absolutely nothing about plants. Nor do I really have an interest in ever knowing anything about plants. And yet, be that as it may, I found Susan Orlean’s book, The Orchid Thief, fascinating. How can that be?
First off, the book is not like any other book, and definitely not like any other biography, I have read. Upon reading the first chapter, it comes across as a fairly stra ...more

I adore this book. It's one of my favorites, not just because it's about two of my favorite things - plants and Florida - and not just because it's by one of my favorite writers, and not just because Charlie Kaufman made it into a totally kick-ass movie.
I adore it because it's so charming, because of sentences like "I suppose I do have one unembarrassing passion: I want to know what it feels like to be passionate about something," because Orlean writes about her human subjects with a bit of "Ca ...more
I adore it because it's so charming, because of sentences like "I suppose I do have one unembarrassing passion: I want to know what it feels like to be passionate about something," because Orlean writes about her human subjects with a bit of "Ca ...more

The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean
A while back when I blogged about reading and enjoying WINGED OBSESSION, Jessica Speart ‘s compelling work of narrative nonfiction about an exotic butterfly collector and the fish and wildlife agent obsessed with bringing him to justice, a few people who commented wanted to make sure I’d also read Susan Orlean’s THE ORCHID THIEF. I hadn’t, but somehow, that book never rose to the top of my to-read list. I wasn’t all that into orchids, so I wasn’t sure it was for m ...more
A while back when I blogged about reading and enjoying WINGED OBSESSION, Jessica Speart ‘s compelling work of narrative nonfiction about an exotic butterfly collector and the fish and wildlife agent obsessed with bringing him to justice, a few people who commented wanted to make sure I’d also read Susan Orlean’s THE ORCHID THIEF. I hadn’t, but somehow, that book never rose to the top of my to-read list. I wasn’t all that into orchids, so I wasn’t sure it was for m ...more

Mar 06, 2012
David
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Orchid collectors, real estate investors
You could summarize The Orchid Thief as "Florida is a crazy place, y'all." It's one of the better non-fiction books I've read recently, starting with a scheme by John Laroche, a not-precisely-likeable but still very interesting fellow whom the author interviews and follows around in the course of writing her book, but delving into Victorian orchid cultivation (they had no idea how to grow orchids, especially in England, but they were mad about them) and flower genetics, Florida endangered specie
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"This was the low, simmering part of the state, as quiet as a shrine except for crickets keeping time and the creak of trees bending and the crackly slam of a screen door and the clatter of a car now and then ..."
"We whipped past abandoned bungalows melting into woodpiles, and past NO TRESPASSING signs shot up like Swiss cheese, and past a rusty boat run aground on someone's driveway, and past fences leaning like old ladies, and then almost past a hand-lettered sign that interested Laroche, so h ...more
"We whipped past abandoned bungalows melting into woodpiles, and past NO TRESPASSING signs shot up like Swiss cheese, and past a rusty boat run aground on someone's driveway, and past fences leaning like old ladies, and then almost past a hand-lettered sign that interested Laroche, so h ...more

more shortly, but I really enjoyed this book, which I read because it's my real-world book group's selection for September. It's sad that it got such low ratings because of people's expectations as a book of true crime, because it's so much more: obsession, passion, history, and an exploration of why people become so consumed by having something that they'll do anything to get it.
more coming soon. ...more
more coming soon. ...more

I thought I had added this book to my “read” list along time ago, but discovered I hadn’t. I read this book back in 2002 on the recommendation of a friend. The book is non-fiction and recounts the various misadventures of a a gent whose calling in life is “orchid poacher“. In other words, he makes a living going into the hinterlands of the Everglades (Fakahatchee Strand) to find and harvest, often illegally, rare orchids for buyers willing to pay Big Bucks for these amazing plants. The Holy Grai
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If you haven't figured it out by now, I like histories and I like learning how people--usually real people-- live their lives in their particular environment.
This has both: learn the history of the orchid and discover a subculture of crazed flower lovers in Florida. I knew nothing about orchids when I started reading this-- it made me want to know more. 'Why are people obsessed? ... Huh, that is kind of interesting... what an intriguing little flower!' It made me covet my own orchid (could I ke ...more
This has both: learn the history of the orchid and discover a subculture of crazed flower lovers in Florida. I knew nothing about orchids when I started reading this-- it made me want to know more. 'Why are people obsessed? ... Huh, that is kind of interesting... what an intriguing little flower!' It made me covet my own orchid (could I ke ...more

"There is nothing more melancholy than empty festive places."
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A fascinating exploration of the obsession with orchids, The Orchid Thief is as much about its author as its subject. It is her story of writing the book: her observations and opinions of everyone she meets and the state of Florida. I preferred the sections not about her: the history of early orchid-hunters, the Victorian era orchid craze, international smuggling of plants and animals, and the local theft of plants. Some digressions, about the history of Floridian real estate fraud and the Semin
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The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession is a fascinating, yet oddly meandering, account of journalist Susan Orlean's years-long investigation into the Florida covert orchid trade. The book began as an article published by Orlean in New Yorker magazine in 1995.
Orlean became acquainted with John Laroche, an orchid-obsessed caucasian Floridian, who had recently been charged with poaching native Polyrrhiza lindenii (ghost orchid) plants from the Seminole (Native American) preservation ...more
Orlean became acquainted with John Laroche, an orchid-obsessed caucasian Floridian, who had recently been charged with poaching native Polyrrhiza lindenii (ghost orchid) plants from the Seminole (Native American) preservation ...more

Rex Stout’s fat detective suffered from orchidelirium. He would never vary his routine of working in his famous plant rooms on the top floor of the brownstone house no matter what the emergency, to Archie Goodwin’s consternation.
Like bibliomania, orchidelirium is a mania that involves collecting — unlimited collecting. The orchid is “a jewel of a flower on a haystack of a plant.” Orchids have evolved into the “biggest flowering plant family on earth,” and many survive only in small niches they ...more
Like bibliomania, orchidelirium is a mania that involves collecting — unlimited collecting. The orchid is “a jewel of a flower on a haystack of a plant.” Orchids have evolved into the “biggest flowering plant family on earth,” and many survive only in small niches they ...more

Like a lot of people, my entry point for this book was the film Adaptation. I assumed that the film deviated a lot more from the book than it actually did (of course, in the book the author doesn't really -spoiler alert?- have a clandestine drug-fueled affair with John Laroche that culminates in vehicular manslaughter), but all the really profound themes about obsession and longing remain intact.
I was pleasantly surprised that the presentation, essentially a New Yorker piece fleshed out to its m ...more
I was pleasantly surprised that the presentation, essentially a New Yorker piece fleshed out to its m ...more

What can I say? One of the best books I've ever read, bar none. It is superlative and I cannot recommend it enough.
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Loved this book and, in an unusual twist, loved the movie based upon it even more, for Charlie Kaufman's inplausible but brilliant screenplay "Adaptation." I don't think you can properly appreciate what he did with the movie without first reading the book. Kaufman's innovatative and very post-modern treatment of the material gets 5 stars from me (and it's got Meryl Streep and Nicholas Cage in it -- what more could you want).
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May 15, 2007
Amy
added it
This book was too scientific for me. I had no idea how obsessed people are over orchid and how many varieties there are, but there were some chapters that were way too scientific for me and I had no interest in the book during those sections. I stopped reading it halfway through. Just had no interest in it.

In 1994, John Laroche and three Seminole Indian men, were caught leaving a Florida Wildlife Preserve with bags full of Ghost orchid (Polyrrhiza lindenii) specimens. They challenged the arrest on the basis of a law allowing Native tribes to violate the endangered species act. Susan Orleans, a columnist for The New Yorker went to Florida to get the story. She befriended the weirdly charismatic Laroche, gained entry to the bizarre world of orchid collectors, and ultimately expanded the article into
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Overall, this is an informative and interesting book on orchids but I found that I had some problems with Orlean's writing style - and they were the same issues I had while reading THE LIBRARY BOOK. While there's a lot of interesting information, Orlean seems to want to include absolutely all of her research in the book and I felt like there could have been some editing. From some reviews I've read, they said that Orlean should have stopped with her New Yorker article and that the book goes on a
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Jan 27, 2020
Sierra The Book Addict
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
non-fiction
Was very informative about orchids and the obsessed people who collect them. From the ways that people obtained then, to the shows, to the customers, to even the great lengths in which people would go to get them. Such a crazy thing to collect and spend money on.
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I'm the product of a happy and uneventful childhood in the suburbs of Cleveland, followed by a happy and pretty eventful four years as a student at University of Michigan. From there, I wandered to the West Coast, landing in Portland, Oregon, where I managed (somehow) to get a job as a writer. This had been my dream, of course, but I had no experience and no credentials. What I did have, in spades
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Susan Orlean, the author of The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession and staff writer for The New Yorker, is back on bookshelves...
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“The world is so huge that people are always getting lost in it. There are too many ideas and things and people too many directions to go. I was starting to believe that the reason it matters to care passionately about something is that it whittles the world down to a more manageable size. It makes the world seem not huge and empty but full of possibility.”
—
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“I suppose I do have one embarrassing passion- I want to know what it feels like to care about something passionately.”
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