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When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy

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How the Word Is Passed meets Braiding Sweetgrass in a cultural and personal reclamation of Black history and Black botanical mastery, told through the stories of long-lived trees.

The histories of trees in America are also the histories of Black Americans. Pecan trees were domesticated by an enslaved African named Antoine; sycamore trees were both havens and signposts for people trying to escape enslavement; poplar trees are historically associated with lynching; and willow bark has offered the gift of medicine. These trees, and others, testify not only to the complexity of the Black American narrative but also to a heritage of Black botanical expertise that, like Native American traditions, predates the United States entirely.

In When Trees Testify, award-winning plant biologist Beronda L. Montgomery explores the way seven trees—as well as the cotton shrub—are intertwined with Black history and culture. She reveals how knowledge surrounding these trees has shaped America since the very beginning. As Montgomery shows, trees are material witnesses to the lives of enslaved Africans and their descendants.

Combining the wisdom of science and history with stories from her own path to botany, Montgomery talks to majestic trees, and in this unique and compelling narrative, they answer.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published January 20, 2026

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Beronda L. Montgomery

3 books25 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 135 reviews
Profile Image for Dona's Books.
1,370 reviews308 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 10, 2026
This was a beautiful book, and sad.

***

Pre-Read Notes:

I love popular science books, and I really love trees. The concept of this book, which braids natural history (trees) and human history (Black American science history), sounded interesting to me.

"Encountering one of the massive, hundreds-of-years-old oak trees that still stand in a variety of places in the United States can feel life changing. The first time I visited the campus of Hampton University, a historically Black college and university in Virginia, I came upon a majestic, thickly canopied oak tree . The sheer size of this being took my breath away." p129

Final Review:

(thoughts & recs) This is an interesting piece of nonfiction because of the form. Considering the history of different recognizable tree species in the US through the dizzying lens of USian history of slavery and racism creates a memorable read. I may have come for the trees but I stayed for my fellow humans and the history we all share.

WHEN TREES TESTIFY is a good choice for readers who enjoyed Sasha Bonét's THE WATERBEARERS. For fans of memoir that apply a historical lens.

My Favorite Things:

✔️ "That day, I feared that I would have to confront one of my greatest fears: that non-Black Americans who might not understand the deep and lasting trauma of chattel slavery to the enslaved and their descendants in the United States would be going about the land with joy and reckless curiosity, rather than a deep appreciation for the disturbing, but very real, history that continued to soak the soils." p11 She inviting us in here, but requesting reverence.

✔️ This book is revealing in a few different ways, one being the extensive wisdom it contains on survival botony. Like this: "We also learned the critical lesson of distinguishing blackberry bushes from poison oak. Mom taught me the concept of “if there are three, let it be.” This worked because poison oak, which makes clustered fruit that could be mistaken for unripe blackberries, has compound leaves with three leaflets, whereas wild blackberry was in the “if there are five, let it thrive” category of plants that are not likely to be harmful and possess compound leaves with five leaflets." p48

✔️ My favorite section was the one on oaks. I grew up with a giant old oak on my yard and I remember it like a friend. "Quercus virginiana, the southern live oak, is perhaps the most widely recognized species. Some of the iconic photos of large, spreading southern live oaks that are hundreds to a thousand years old are the Q. virginiana species from the southeastern part of the United States where the trees are prevalent. They persist in this area for hundreds of years due to the generally warmer winter climates of this region. Distinct from deciduous varieties, live oaks maintain leaves on their branches throughout much of the year. In the spring, as new leaves are produced, their emergence and expansion results in the dropping of the prior year’s leaves." p128

✔️ I adored the section on the Apple tree, specifically the passages about St. Nicholas and Christmas bags.

Content Notes: racism, racist language, casual racism, institutional racism, slavery, intergenerational trauma, white supremacy,

Thank you to the author Beronda L. Montgomery, Henry Holt & Co., and NetGalley for an accessible digital copy of WHEN TREES TESTIFY. All views are mine.
Profile Image for Manybooks.
3,878 reviews100 followers
February 16, 2026
With her late January 2026 When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy botanist (in other words plant biologist) Beronda L. Montgomery enlighteningly (and also at times painfully) combines and fuses together personal memoir, history and science to skilfully examine the significance of trees in Black (in African American) history and culture (focusing on seven trees in particular, on pecan, sycamore, willow, poplar, oak, mulberry and apple trees, each of which, along with the cotton shrub bears witness to enslavement, a legacy of racism but that these trees are also symbols of emancipation, perseverance and self determination).

Thus and yes, yes, yes, a totally wonderful, educational as well as delightfully engaging personal reading experience When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy has been (and a book that I am not only going to be hugely treasuring but which I will also be reading more than once since for one my first perusal of When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy was rather majorly rushed and that for two I have indeed adored Montgomery's text, her themes and contents so much, to such and extent that rereading When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy would both be an absolute textual delight and also to be honest a total necessity, something I not only want to do but also need to do).

And especially for my academic reading self with a PhD in German language and literature, I am definitely, I am certainly massively appreciating and also very much enjoying Beronda L. Montgomery textually showing me, telling me, nicely minutely dissecting in and throughout When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy and using science, history, memoir in wonderful and natural combination how trees (in general) have traditionally served the Black community as shelters, for community gatherings, for education, activism and even for worship (that sycamores for example with their huge trunks becoming hollow as they age once served as hiding places for slaves escaping from their "masters" and that part of the Underground Railroad is known as the Sycamore Trail for said reason).

But yes, Montgomery in When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy equally so (and necessarily) shows and describes how certain tree species (but of course through no fault of their own so to speak) also have tragic and traumatic associations (that for example poplars do have a horridly sordid history of being lynching trees and which according to When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy was immortalised in Billie Holiday’s 1939 protest song Strange Fruit and how in the West African kingdom of Dahomey, an oak tree became known as the Tree of Forgetting because of the sadly putrid tradition of marching captives around it several times to stress the importance of forgetting their homes and their families before departing for a life of slavery in the so-called New World). And while as a total tree lover and tree fanatic, these negative associations are bien sûr majorly personally uncomfortable, I am also both massively glad and hugely appreciative of Beronda L. Montgomery showing both the positives and the negatives regarding trees and American Black history and culture in When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy (that she does not ever downplay slavery, racism and that trees were often used for nefarious and inhumane purposed against African Americans), and yes, how Montgomery in When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy weaves in her scientific expertise and her experiences growing up around trees in Arkansas to deliver a poignant and singular account of Black American history and culture, this is totally textually lovely, this is totally verbally wonderful (and also makes my rating for When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy solidly five stars and that I do very very warmly and highly recommend When Trees Testify: Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy).
Profile Image for Debbie Mitchell.
559 reviews17 followers
February 9, 2026
"Trees hold the transformed breath of decades of human life... and testify to history and those of their past"

I learned so much American history and botany through this book. The recency of Jim Crow and sharecropping was something that really struck me while reading this book. Montgomery is GenX (she talks about being in high school in 1989) and in the cotton chapter she talks about how her mother was forced to miss school during the spring to go work the cotton fields supporting her family.

Montgomery featured 8 different plants: Pecans, sycamore, willow, poplar, mulberry, oak cotton and apple trees. With each chapter she wove together (1) her own personal history (and sometimes a travelogue) (2) the botany and biochemistry of the plant and (3) the history of the plant specifically with respect to Black Americans.

I found this structure extremely effective. I learned a lot of botany that I didn't know in an accessible and interesting way! I particularly enjoyed learning about how plants are grafted. I didn't know how that worked!

In general I was struck by the number of Black botanists who were enslaved that held so much botanical knowledge.

It reminded me a bit of the book BLACK IN BLUES where Imani Perry talks about the enslaved botanists who made the cultivation of indigo possible.

A few parts of history that will stick with me: (1) Enslaved women chewing cotton roots to prevent pregnancy (2) Blackdom, New Mexico as a Black settlement outside Roswell, NM where Jim Crow was not in effect. In Blackdom, Black Americans grew Apple Trees for their crop. (3) I had no idea that Mulberry trees were cultivated for silk production!

One small note is that there is a brief HP reference in the Willow chapter.

The setting of this book is primarily Little Rock, Arkansas, but the author also travels to many locations including Charleston, South Carolina and Blackdom, New Mexico (outside of Roswell, NM).

I highly recommend this book! Thank you for Holt books for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Kelly.
1,042 reviews
September 30, 2025
When Trees Testify is Beronda L. Montgomery’s exploration of trees that are a prominent part of Black history in the United States.

Montgomery delves into a mix of personal connections to these selected species of trees, Black history connected to them, and information about the scientific makeup of the trees themselves.

Over the course of the book she introduces us to the pecan, sycamore, willow, poplar, mulberry, oak, and apple trees as well as the cotton shrub. Some of these trees share many similarities, some are very different. Many can be found not just in the southern United States but across the country and in other parts of world. They all have a shared history with those who breathed the oxygen they respirated, something given freely that was one of the only things given to Black people that suffered the indignity of having so much taken away.

Montgomery explores how the trees could bring Black people together and drive them away. How Black people used their knowledge for better farming and harvesting practices that often didn’t benefit them and medicinal and healing practices that did. Stories about the man who grafted pecan trees to commercialize them, how enslaved women would use parts of these trees to prevent pregnancy, the massacre of a Black community in Arkansas, and Blackdom, a community of Black people in New Mexico who grew apples as part of their crops are all fascinating stories.

Throughout the book she provides personal touches, tying in her own memories of gathering pecans and mulberries, holiday fruit bags with apples and oranges, and hiding away under a massive willow tree appropriately named Willow. I have my own memories of an apple tree that I was devastated to see die the first year it bore fruit. A maple tree I grew from a seed that had grown massive by the time we moved away from my childhood home. The blossoms and picking cherries from the cherry tree in our front yard. The oak tree my grandfather put a wooden swing on, and a pine tree near my grandparents’ home my brother and I would hide under, nestled in the fallen needles and enjoying the scent of the tree mixed with the nearby honeysuckle.

Occasionally it does feel like Montgomery strays too far away from the interconnected theme of trees to focus more heavily on Black history or her own personal connection to a tree. The chapter on poplars, I suspect, was particularly difficult to write and features heavily on the tree’s close connection with the many lynchings that have taken place over the years. It doesn’t seem to explore the tree itself to the same detail as other chapters.

In the chapter about apples and the conclusion, Montgomery starts exploring the role of Black people and their relationship with trees in modern times. I think doing this for each type of tree, as a form of looking to the future while exploring the past and present would have added an extra layer of depth that would have made the book even more interesting.

You probably weren’t expecting a book that combines trees and Black history, but this book makes it work, providing a unique approach to learning more about a group of people who haven’t often had their story told.

A complimentary copy of this book was provided by the publisher. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Ebony.
70 reviews1 follower
January 18, 2026
As a Black American I am aware of the relationship and history we have/share with trees. Yet, I still learned so much from this book. Part memoir, history, and botany. Montgomery shares with us her experiences with several different species of trees growing up and then shows us the history that Black Americans have with the same trees. It does get a little repetitive but it doesn’t take away from the information she shares as a whole. We overlook the complicated history of something as unassuming as a tree because of the beauty we see in it. Two things can be true at once and it’s important to acknowledge these things.
Profile Image for Luna and Co.
161 reviews8 followers
February 16, 2026
I learned so much in this book! I'm very impressed by how the author managed to make it a very personal book while also being so informative about both history and botany! The writing is enjoyable and I'll definitely be on the look out for Beronda L. Montgomery next books! I listened to the audiobook and the narrator was very nice to listen to.

Thank you, Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for providing me with an ARC in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for tillie hellman.
808 reviews20 followers
January 25, 2026
very interesting and well written book, a combo of memoir botany and history, all tied together well and overall very original. both frank and important discussion of anti-Black violence and history in the US, along with joy and empowerment of Black individuals. very readable and i enjoyed the audiobook!
Profile Image for Beauregard Francis.
310 reviews14 followers
February 11, 2026
Overall a good and interesting book! I did prefer the historical and scientific portions to the memoir portions however. I also feel like the book could've benefitted from some more thoughtful structuring of the three different approaches within each tree chapter, as sometimes the (lack of) transition between a memoir/historical section to the scientific section was jarring. One section I remember went from in one sentence discussing a very horrible historical moment to the next sentence translating the Latin genus name of a tree, which was disorienting.
Profile Image for Cynthia.
98 reviews37 followers
January 21, 2026
I liked this book but didn't love it. It tried to be a lot of things at once—part memoir, part survey of Black American history, part science writing—but I don't think the author quite succeeded at fusing the three in a satisfying way.

First the good: From the contributions of indigenous Africans' and enslaved people's botanical knowledge in the development of American agriculture, to the establishment of a free Black farming community in New Mexico (of all places), to the use of cotton root bark and apple seeds by enslaved women as abortifacients, I learned so much from this book, even though I'd consider myself pretty well versed in African-American history already. In addition, the powerful idea that trees almost literally transform suffering into beauty through the process of photosynthesis, by converting the breath of those who stood (or hung) under them into wood and flowers and oxygen, will stay with me for forever.

Now the not so good: If Montgomery had written a straight memoir, focusing on her family's roots in Arkansas and the connections to Black American history more generally, with tangential nods to the importance of specific trees to those stories, I think this book would have worked better for me. But she did the inverse, centering each chapter of the book on a tree species and then making connections from there. Sometimes that was successful—the chapter about the cotton shrub was my favorite—but more often than not, the connections drawn were either generic or repetitive. Willows and oaks and poplars and sycamores grew "strange fruit" as the sites of lynchings. Bark and seeds and leaves and roots were used as medicine and as poison. Enslaved people's botanical knowledge was exploited for cultivating pecans and silkworms and apples and cotton. When so many chapters said the same thing, it started to feel like writing for that sake of filling up pages rather than to add substance—especially unfortunate given the author's apparently rich family history that was not given nearly enough attention.

Overall, I thought the history and the science in When Trees Testify were equally fascinating. I just wish it had leaned into the family history rather than forcing a tree-centered narrative structure that, in my view, was clunky and redundant.

I won this book in a Goodreads giveaway. Thanks to Henry Holt for the advanced review copy.
Profile Image for Tracey.
337 reviews17 followers
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
January 8, 2026
Thank you to Henry Holt and the Author for the physical ARC of this book.

I was so excited to have won this book in a giveaway, it's just one of those books that I really enjoyed holding while reading.

The author does a fantastic job of infusing personal stories and history of tree in 8 different chapters. Each chapter focuses on one tree or shrub (cotton) but other botanicals get mentioned just the eight are the main events.

Montgomery does a thoughtful job of discussing the tree and giving you information about the tree while giving you historical information about it at the same time and infusing personal stories about herself and generations past.

It's only seven days in and I can already see this in my top 10 of 2026.
Profile Image for Jessica Haider.
2,240 reviews341 followers
February 28, 2026
In When Trees Testify, Beronda L. Montgomery explores Black history through the stories of seven trees and the cotton shrub, blending botany, cultural history, and personal reflection. Each chapter centers on a different tree—pecan, sycamore, poplar, willow—revealing how they bear witness to enslavement, resistance, medicine, and Black botanical mastery.

The structure is episodic, but the impact accumulates. Montgomery thoughtfully reclaims knowledge long overlooked, reminding us that trees are not just scenery—they are living archives. After this book, even a quiet stand of trees feels like testimony.
Profile Image for Miranda Munguia-Paul.
6 reviews1 follower
November 7, 2025
I was eager to read Beronda Montgomery's second book following her first, "Lessons from Plants", one of my personal favorites. I had high hopes for "When Trees Testify" and was not disappointed! I absolutely savored every chapter and consider it one of my top favorite reads of this year. "Braiding Sweetgrass" by Robin Wall Kimmerer is also one of my all-time favorites and "When Trees Testify" is a fantastic companion read. I love how both Montgomery and Kimmerer recognize that they are often under-represented as women of color in their field, but are inspired by ancestral knowledge and childhood experiences to share why plants and nature can foster both a meaningful and scientific sense of wonder in our lives. I am a big fan of Montgomery's writing style of grounding each tree reflection to a personal experience and historical context for Black Americans, while still including the science background. I personally crave learning about science, but also enjoy drawing deep meaning from it. Unfortunately, Montgomery shares about her lifetime journey of carrying the weight of horrific injustice inflicted upon her ancestors, which the trees are often witness to. She shares important lesser-known history and leaves the reader with a sense of hope that ancestral reverence and knowledge is also the key to self-emancipation and healing. Montgomery's second book has solidified her as one of my favorite authors!

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Publishers for allowing me to read an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Marc Gonzalez.
107 reviews2 followers
March 1, 2026
“…the trees held not only their childhood memories but their captured breath in the form of the wood making up the massive tree trunks.” This idea at the foundation of this books begins this multigenerational, storied, scientific, beautiful narrative about America’s Black botanical legacy. Montgomery moves through different trees and plants that serve as the anchors of every chapter to explore the science, history, and personal stories related to that tree and in a greater fabric about the history of slavery, sharecropping, racism, and the often painful relationship between all of this and these plants. The book reminded me a lot of How the Word is Passed and how Clint Smith also moved between places to tell a greater story about the ways this country has failed and continues to fail to properly address its ugly founding, history, and present. The same trees that once held “strange fruit” are still alive today. Trees that served as stops on the Underground Railroad are still around today. And yet our country continues to try to suppress information and stories like those told in this book.

Montgomery quotes Tiya miles, “in our times, trees are the only remaining physical [and living] markers of the lives, lives, and freedom struggles of enslaved people.” And that is why I am so glad that Brenda Montgomery shared this story with us.
Profile Image for 2raccoonsinacoat.
79 reviews
February 28, 2026
Lovely, eye-opening read with a good balance of black history and dendrology. I appreciated Montgomery’s linking of epigenetic theory with chattel slavery, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to be made uncomfortable by how little I know/understand about the depths of racial trauma. I will continue to try to learn more, be better, and speak up.
Profile Image for Shirleynature.
279 reviews86 followers
March 10, 2026
A heavy theme. With occasional reflections of the healing power we enjoy in relationships with trees and other plants, Montgomery balances family and autobiographical stories with deeply painful moments of race-based injustice that is rooted in specific time and place across the US and occasional globally far-afield mentions to places such as Benin.
Profile Image for Lexi readingwhilehot.
36 reviews
January 27, 2026
Black Botanical Wisdom, as a Celtic white woman in the US, is the gap in spiritual reality I was looking for. Pulling from learned wisdom of indigenous people pre-colonization, the author outlines Black contributions to the field of botany. It felt like reading a memoir and also a “IMPORTANT plants of the US” at the same time. I love whatever this genre is - similar to Braiding Sweetgrass.

Each chapter is on one “plant” or tree. I learned so much about the history of these plants from their biological makeup to their sociopolitical use in media and culture. Buying a copy will be useful for marking up and revisiting at different times of life, when I want to reconnect with these plants.
Profile Image for K..
4,819 reviews1,134 followers
February 21, 2026
Content warnings: racism, death, slavery, rape, violence, police brutality, mentions of abortion

So here's the thing: I really did enjoy this as an examination of Black history through plants. Where this often lost me, however, was the memoir side of things. The author spends a lot of time reflecting on her own life and her personal history with these plant species, and while the stories she was telling were interesting, it very definitely made this feel like a memoir that occasionally detoured to talk about plants and that's not at all what I thought I was getting.

Maybe I would have had a different experience if I'd read it with my eyeballs?? IDK. I know I've been pretty negative here - please know that I *did* enjoy this and the chapter about cotton in particular will stick with me. I was just expecting more of the historical botany and less "I was scared to cross the train track bridge thing".
Profile Image for michaela.
53 reviews
February 26, 2026
“Just as roots and their emergence determine place for an individual plant and are central to maintaining the physical stability and health of the plant that they root, our ancestral roots are real structures linked to our placemaking, health, longevity, and legacy.”


this book was arguably one of the best nonfiction books i’ve ever read. Dr. Montgomery is a master at combining botanical facts, anecdotes, and history into a cohesive narrative; i could have read 1,000 more pages. i think it was fascinating looking at major US historical events through the lens of trees. additionally, there were many facts that i never knew, like enslaved women using cotton roots to prevent pregnancy. and i learned facts about my home state of New Mexico that were new to me! who was going to tell me that NM is one of the top producers of pecans in the US…. wild… and i really want to visit the Blackdom marker.

everyone should read this book!
Profile Image for Nicole.
82 reviews18 followers
February 25, 2026
This book holds significant value as it presents a shared life story from the descendant of individuals who endured the brutal realities of chattel slavery and Jim Crow era in our country. Through the narrative, the author gives a voice to her ancestors and others who can no longer speak, recounting the emotional struggles witnessed by her and her family in deep south Arkansas, a region still grappling with deep-rooted racism.

Her story is crucial not only for its exploration of important Southern plants but also for highlighting that their cultivation today owes much to the intelligence and hard work of African Americans.

I really enjoyed this read and learned a lot about trees I loved climbing as a child. I was surprised to discover the harrowing backgrounds of some of my favorite trees. The author discussed two trees I've seen and photographed, one of which has a poignant story from a plantation in South Carolina that deeply affected me. While I cherish southern trees, I now recognize they can symbolize darker histories for others, and I’ll keep that in mind as I appreciate them.
Profile Image for Elly.
237 reviews1 follower
February 4, 2026
This book combined a history of slavery, botany and personal family stories. Unique and interesting premise. I found the story really pulled me in and gave me a different perspective from her family's stories. Never considered a plant or tree could carry such a triggering nature but it makes sense. I will say if anyone wanted to write a horror novel about what trees or land might remember I would totally read it. I thought that idea was very eerie. Will add this author to my following list and hope to see more by them.
Profile Image for Jasmine.
489 reviews
December 1, 2025
Beronda L. Montgomery explores the connection between seven trees, and cotton shrubs, and black history. The author does a great job connecting botany, history, and memoir all while making it very readable. Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer is a good comparison title, if you read and enjoyed it I definitely recommend picking up this one. I can see myself rereading this in the future and I will definitely be picking up a copy when it comes out.
Profile Image for Chloe.
18 reviews
January 4, 2026
I won an ARC in a Goodreads giveaway. Thank you to the publisher for the copy!!

Part memoir, part history, part botany, Dr. Montgomery does an excellent job of combining personal experiences with facts. Her writing is evocative and is as informational as it is emotional. I learned a lot from this book and will never look at trees the same way again. Well worth the read!
Profile Image for D.A. Gray.
Author 7 books38 followers
March 4, 2026
This is an amazing story of of interconnectedness, bridging biology and botany with American history, with Dr. Montgomery's personal journey. The question of how one deals with an experience of hands in the soil that enabled survival, resistance, agency and wisdom with an emotional response that conflates trauma - is something I will sit with for a long time, and something those who've grown up with silo'ed disciplines and entire segments of our American history left out of our education need to give our attention. This book belongs in conversation with the writings of Dr. David Haskell, Dr. Robin Wall Kimmerer but also poets such as Camille Dungy and Ross Gay -- an important read.
Profile Image for Morgan  Gayles.
156 reviews9 followers
January 20, 2026
This book really made me pause. It explores the deep connection Black people have to land, trees, and botanical knowledge and how that connection is tied to both legacy and trauma. Nature has always been part of our survival and resilience, even when it was shaped by enslavement, displacement, and loss.

When Trees Testify reminds us that trees and land have witnessed our history. Reconnecting with our botanical roots isn’t just about plants…it’s about healing, reclaiming what was taken, and working through the trauma we’re still carrying. Thoughtful, reflective, a bit heavy…but honestly necessary.
Profile Image for Amber.
791 reviews20 followers
February 24, 2026
Absolutely stunning read about the legacy of trees and Black history in the US. It delves into the biology of trees, history of lynching, representations in culture, and more. A magnificent book—please read it!
Profile Image for beans.
87 reviews4 followers
February 3, 2026
this was a powerful read. part memoir, part biology, part history. i do feel like weaving of these parts was a bit disjointed at times but i still really enjoyed it!
Profile Image for Jenna.
425 reviews18 followers
March 2, 2026
Hell yeah trees

This was an awesome part history part memoir part tree science book, and I highly recommend reading it while walking around outside and looking at trees.
Profile Image for Ryne Helvie.
4 reviews
March 3, 2026
Intelligent reclamation of agency ! I liked the thematic dissonance throughout. I came for the botany and stayed for the lesson.
Profile Image for Emily  Ritz.
49 reviews3 followers
January 22, 2026
This was a difficult one. I was intrigued by the title and wanted to learn more about the contributions of black and brown peoples to the study of plants.

First the good, I think once you got going into one of the specific stories the author told there was an intimacy to the experience and I definitely learned more about trees. I was expecting something more along the lines of the book Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer.

I feel the author wrote each chapter like a separate essay so she repeated herself frequently and I think it took away from the overall story telling. The book being non linear I think hurt the cohesion. Maybe if there was a journey we were on with the Author while highlighting each tree, whether that be in trying to process racism in her adult life or how the trees and plants where part of her life growing up. It just felt like it was too many ideals and styles at the same time, which made it hard to get to the true point of the chapters.
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