This volume, a poetic tribute to trees, includes poems conveying the idea that "trees can talk," a form of humanistic botany within the frame of verse. Let the Trees Answer is the third book in the series Between Plants and Humans, ranging from pines in Louisiana to jacarandas in Florida, and along the way, crabapple, Chinese Tallow, catalpa, and other trees scattered throughout the woods and yards of the United States. This is a must read for tree huggers.
This volume, a poetic tribute to trees, includes poems conveying the idea that "trees can talk," a form of humanistic botany within the frame of verse. Let the Trees Answer is the third book in the series Between Plants and Humans, ranging from pines in Louisiana to jacarandas in Florida, and along the way, crabapple, Chinese Tallow, catalpa, and other trees scattered throughout the woods and yards of the United States. This is a must read for tree huggers.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Diane Marquart Moore is a poet, journalist, book author, and blogger at A Word's Worth, who divides her time between Sewanee, Tennessee and New Iberia, Louisiana. She is a regular contributor to the Pinyon Review, has published in The Southwestern Review at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette, Louisiana, Interdisciplinary Humanities, The Xavier Review, Acadiana Profile Magazine, American Weave, Louisiana Historical Review, Trace, and other literary journals. She has been an Associate Editor for Acadiana Lifestyle Magazine, New Iberia, Louisiana, feature writer and columnist for The Daily Iberian, New Iberia, Louisiana, as well as a feature writer and book reviewer for The Yaddasht Haftegy in Ahwaz, Iran where she lived during the reign of the Shahanshah. Her young adult book, Martin's Quest, was a finalist in the Heekins Foundation Award Contest and was selected to be on the supplementary reading list for gifted and talented students by the Louisiana Library Association. Moore is also a retired archdeacon of the Episcopal Diocese of Western Louisiana. Victoria I. Sullivan is a writer, botanist, and photographer. She studied biology at the University of Miami, earned a Ph.D. in biology from Florida State University and held a faculty position in the Department of Biology at the University of Louisiana, Lafayette for 20 years. She has published poetry, flash fiction, numerous botanical papers and other nonfiction, and two speculative fiction sequels, Adoption and Rogue Genes, and a book for nature enthusiasts, Why Water Plants Don't Drown. Sullivan is a resident of Sewanee, Tennessee, and winters in New Iberia, Louisiana.
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