The Treeline cover art

The Treeline

The Last Forest and the Future of Life on Earth

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The Treeline

By: Ben Rawlence
Narrated by: Jamie Parker
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

The Treeline is a spellbinding blend of nature, travel and science writing, deeply researched and beautifully written, underpinned by an urgent environmental message.

The Arctic Treeline - the northern limit of the boreal forest that encircles the globe in an almost unbroken green ring - is the second largest biome on our planet. At this little-known frontline of climate change, the trees have been creeping towards the pole for fifty years already.

Six of the tree species that populate these forests (Larch, Spruce, Mountain Ash, Downy Birch, Balsam Poplar and Scots Pine) form the central protagonists of Ben Rawlence's story. In Scotland, northern Scandinavia, Siberia, Alaska, Canada and Greenland, he discovers what these trees and the people who live and work alongside them have to tell us about the past, present and future of our planet. Scientists are only just beginning to understand the astonishing significance of these forests for all life on Earth. At the Treeline, Rawlence witnesses the accelerating impact of climate change and the devastating legacies of colonialism and capitalism. But he also finds reasons for hope. Humans are creatures of the forest; we have always evolved with trees. The Treeline asks us where our co-evolution might take us next.

© Ben Rawlence 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

Biological Sciences Botany & Plants Earth Sciences Ecosystems & Habitats Environment Nature & Ecology Outdoors & Nature Science Polar Region Inspiring Thought-Provoking Alaska

Critic reviews

This original and readable book takes readers to a part of the world undergoing radical but little-understood change.
An urgent and insightful tour of some of the world's strangest, most bewitching and most endangered environments... This is an important book, and one I will be pressing into other people's hands. (Cal Flyn, author of ISLANDS OF ABANDONMENT)
[A] sweeping account of the Arctic forest that circles the world in an almost unbroken ring.
[A] lyrical and passionate book... The Treeline is a sobering, powerful account of how trees might just save the world. (Kathryn Hughes)
[An] urgent investigation into the Arctic treeline... a meticulously researched and compellingly presented read. (Hannah Beckerman)
Twill rightly provoke fear, but also a sense of wonder ... A beautiful and evocative portrait of the natural world. It is essential reading for those hoping to better understand our changing planet. (Tom Lathan)
Rawlence is a fine ecologist and an excellent writer... The Treeline is timely, salutary and eminently readable. Excellent. (Colin Tudge)
Ben Rawlence... writes with accuracy, beauty and urgency. (Andrew Robinson)
[A] moving, thoughtful, deeply reported elegy for our vanishing world and a map of the one to come. (Nathaniel Rich, author of LOSING EARTH)
A fascinating book drawing on a brilliant, original line of thinking... A perfect combination of lyrical writing and rigorous reporting. Utterly illuminating. (Sophy Roberts, author of THE LOST PIANOS OF SIBERIA)
All stars
Most relevant
It felt like a story of humanity, as well as nature. Beautifully told, with such reverence for nomadic communities. Everyone should read this.

Fascinating

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Even though the story it delivers is heartbreaking at times, I really enjoyed this wonderful book. Beautifully written and beautifully read, it tells of a future we all share. I learned so much about these marvellous life-saving trees and by the end felt very inspired, closer to a wider world, keen to press this book into the hands of everyone I know.

Perfect

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A very interesting story exploring the health of the treeline around the northern hemisphere, investigating the worrying rapid movement of the treeline due to global warming and the trigger effects it has, a truly concerning wake up call to everyone on the planet to do their bit however small too reduce our carbon footprint .
the author also explains the different interactions between species and touches on ancient traditional human cultures and the wealth of wisdom and knowledge we are in danger of losing in our modernisation and losing touch with nature.
the narrator is easy to listen to.

Eye opening wake-up call

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The book takes you on a sobering circumnavigation of the northern latitudes to investigate the impact of climate change. Unique, sobering and ultimately hopeful.

Sobering but hopeful

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Not my usual read but a fascinating book and beautifully descriptive, with a very worrying story.

Fascinating

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