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How to Love a Forest with Author and Forester Ethan Tapper

Posted Thursday, August 15, 2024
Adult Programs

Bolton author and forester Ethan Tapper will be at the library on September 25 at 6pm to talk about his new book, How to Love a Forest.
Tapper was our Chittenden County Forester for years and now manages his 175 acre forest in Bolton as well as advising others on what he calls "The Bittersweet Work of Tending a Changing World."
Join us to learn about forestry, hope and this beautiful place we call home.

Books will be available for purchase from Phoenix Books.
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More About the Book:

A tender, fearless debut by a forester writing in the tradition of Suzanne Simard, Robin Wall Kimmerer, and Robert Macfarlane.

Only those who love trees should cut them, writes forester Ethan Tapper. In How to Love a Forest (September 10), Ethan Tapper asks what it means to live in a time in which ecosystems are in retreat and extinctions rattle the bones of the earth. How do we respond to the harmful legacies of the past? How do we use our species' incredible power to heal rather than to harm? Tapper walks us through the fragile and resilient community that is a forest. He introduces us to wolf trees and spring ephemerals, and to the mysterious creatures of the rhizosphere and the necrosphere. He helps us reimagine what forests are and what it means to care for them. This world, Tapper writes, is degraded by people who do too much and by those who do nothing. As the ecosystems that sustain all life struggle, we straddle a status quo that treats them as commodities and opposing claims that the only true expression of love for the natural world is to leave it alone. Proffering a more complex vision, Tapper argues that the actions we must take to protect ecosystems are often counterintuitive, uncomfortable, even heartbreaking. With striking prose, he shows how bittersweet acts—like loving deer and hunting them, loving trees and felling them—can be expressions of compassion. Tapper weaves a new land ethic for the modern world.