LOL!!!

-----Original Message-----
From: Joseph Zorzin <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Aug 27, 2009 2:48 am
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Need Tree Fiction Recommendations















by the way, IMHO, the really 
biggest, most far fetched fantasy and science fiction about trees and 
forests?is the forestry profession!


Joe


?


PS: this is an interesting 
thread-?which has me thinking?that it might?be fun to start a 
thread on?trees and forests in art, we see a lot of great ?photos in 
this list serve,?many of which are truly artistic?but the way painters 
show the subject can go to a different dimension



  
----- Original Message ----- 

  
From: 
  Edward 
  Frank 

  
To: [email protected] 

  
Sent: Thursday, August 27, 2009 2:23 
  AM

  
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Need Tree Fiction 
  Recommendations

  



  
Jennifer,

  
?

  
I have an extensive fantasy and science fiction book collection.? I 
  could likely write a forty page essay on the place of trees and forests in 
the 
  fantasy and science fiction genres.? I will restrain myself here to a 
  handful of recommendations.? Certainly among fantasy novels, J. R. R. 
  Tolkien's trilogy The Lord of the Rings is the epitome of a story featuring 
  forests and trees.? Prior to this time the forests were simply a vague, 
  ill defined background into which the other elements of the story were set, 
or 
  would pass through.? With LOTR the forests and trees are fleshed out and 
  developed until they become a character in their own right.? The 
  introduction of the animated trees - the Ents -mealy adds to this element of 
  the novels.? Beyond the LOTR three are fragments and continuations of 
  stories featuring these elements in the Simalrillion and in the Unfinished 
  Tales.? These are another source I would recommend.

  
?

  
Another fantasy novel worth reading is the second book of Terry Brooks' 
  Shannara seriesentitled "The Elfstones of Shannara."? A blirb about the 
  book reads as follows:? "Ancient, ultimate evil threatened the Elves and 
  the Races of Man. For the Ellcrys, the tree of long-lost Elven magic, was 
  dying, loosing the spell of Forbidding that locked the hordes of Demons away 
  from Earth. Already the fearsome Reaper was free. Only one source had the 
  power to stop it: the Elfstones of Shannara. And the valiant companions must 
  ride again in an impossible quest to find them."

  
?

  
On the science fiction front two books come to mind to recommend.? 
  the first is "The Word For World is Forest"? by Ursula K. LeGuin.? 
  ?A reader review states he following: The basic scenario is isolated 
  earth colonists destroying a native planet whose inhabitants learn to fight 
  back. It is very well executed and is quite deep and philosophical if you 
  really engage with it, yet it also has a great story and great drama. 

  
?

  
The other I would recommend in "The Integral Trees" by Larry Haven.? 
  A review of the book reads:? Surrounding a decaying neutron star is a 
  torus of breathable air, the Smoke Ring, wherein - in near-weightless 
  conditions - float some unusual flora and fauna: gigantic trees shaped like 
  mathematical integration signs; cubic-mile globules of water ("ponds"); 
  globular jungles; creatures large and small; and. . . some tree-dwelling 
  people, attenuated descendants of a space survey team who fled into the Smoke 
  Ring half a millennium ago to escape ill-defined but apparently totalitarian 
  Earth government.

  
?

  
Both the LeGuin book (actually a novella, but available as a short book) 
  and the Niven novel won the Hugo Award and Nebula Award for best science 
  fiction novella and novel when they were published.? LeGuin is perhaps 
  best known for her Earthsea Trilogy which was somewhat mutilated as a 
  mini-series on the SciFi channel a couple years ago.? Niven is a multiple 
  award winner known for his hard science fiction stories.His best known work 
is 
  the novel "Ringworld."? There are several more I would recommend, but 
  these are a good start.

  
?

  
Ed Frank

  
?

  
?

  
?

  
?

  
?

  
?

  
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is 
  the source of all true art and all science." - Albert 
  Einstein









 




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