Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
Summary:
A tale of obsession so fierce that a man kills the thing he loves most: the only giant golden spruce on earth. As vividly as Jon Krakauer put readers on Everest, John Vaillant takes us into the heart of North America's last great forest, where trees grow to eighteen feet in diameter, sunlight never touches the ground, and the chainsaws are always at work.
When a shattered kayak and camping gear are found on an uninhabited island, they reignite a mystery surrounding a shocking act of protest. Five months earlier, logger-turned-activist Grant Hadwin had plunged naked into a river in British Columbia's Queen Charlotte Islands, towing a chainsaw. When his night's work was done, a unique Sitka spruce, 165 feet tall and covered with luminous golden needles, teetered on its stump. Two days later it fell.
The tree, a fascinating puzzle to scientists, was sacred to the Haida, a fierce seafaring tribe based in the Queen Charlottes. Vaillant recounts the bloody history of the Haida and the early fur trade, and provides harrowing details of the logging industry, whose omnivorous violence would claim both Hadwin and the golden spruce. .
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Rating:
Maybe it's time to get a Kindle....
Customer Rating:
This book can be read at many levels. It can be read as a "dual tragedy" (the tragic fall of Grant Hadwin and the Golden Spruce). It can be read as a history of the Pacific Northwest (the Queen Charlotte islands in particular). It can be read as an expose of the logging industry. But as I closed its pages a few minutes ago, I had an epiphany. This is a well printed book. The paper has such a wholesome feel to it. I love the feel of a book, of good paper, a crowded library -- of fine wood (like bookcases). And this book is a wake up call about deforestation. At the book's close John Vaillant managed to coax me into looking at my own part in deforestation. And that is the level at which I will remember this book.
The book is packed with facts, stories and anecdotes about trees, logging and the people of the Queen Charlottes (the Haida in particular, but the Anglos not insignificantly). The lives of its two main characters (Grant Hadwin and the Golden Spruce) weave in and out rather casually. If you are looking for a spellbinding linear story about the tree -- or the man who felled it - you are likely to be disappointed. If you expect to learn about History or Haida culture you are likely to be frustrated by the lack of an index and/or glossary.
But if you read for meaning, you will be left with an awareness of our part in destroying the world around us garnered through accounts of very human beings (like ourselves) and their inability to see what they are doing. Vaillant does not accept "Father forgive them, for they know not what they do." Rather, he helps us to see what we do -- very gently and lovingly. At that level, the book (like the madness of Grant Hadwin) makes perfect sense.
Now I just have to wait for George Perkins Marsh's Man And Nature: Or Physical Geography As Modified By Human Action (1864) to come out for Kindle.
The Haida People, Their Golden Spruce and the Man Who Felled It
Customer Rating:
This is a very well-written and interesting book. It has several plots, each of them holding the reader's interest throughout the book.
One of the plots deals with the history of logging in the northwest, specifically in Alaska where the Haida Indians live. The Haida live in a very remote area of Alaska, difficult to get to and accessible only by air or boat. On the islands they call home, there is an amazing tree - a Golden Spruce. The Haida have incorporated this tree into their spirituality.
The book also deals with the history of this tree. Because of its color, it is an obvious mutation. How it came to be, how it survived, and how it is now replicated is a theme of this book.
The most striking plot that weaves in and out of the whole book is the story of a man named Hadwin, an extreme athlete also known for his eccentricity and confrontational manner. Hadwin has destroyed this tree and disappeared. Supposedly he drowned in the turbulent Alaskan waters. However, because of his ability to survive the most extreme conditions, there are many who think he faked his death and still lives.
My only difficulty with this fascinating book is the portrayal of Hadwin. As a clinical social worker, I am very familiar with serious and chronic mental illness. What the author portrays as a variant of the norm is actually something far more serious. Anyone who has to stuff cotton in their ears to keep the voices at bay suffers from auditory hallucinations. Hadwin has a history of hallucinations, paranoia and varied delusions. To discuss him as an eccentric or quirky type of guy is to do injustice to the fact that this man is very, very ill.
All in all, I found this book to be a fascinating page-turner, one I highly recommend.
The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness and Greed
Customer Rating:
The author of The Golden Spruce, John Vaillant, is the best modern writer that I have read in years. This book is so good that I don't just recommend it to friends; I buy copies and send them.
I am up to copy #16.
An extreme form of environmental activism, beautifully written.
Customer Rating:
"The Golden Spruce" is one of the few books that I wished there was more by the time I was reading the last page. Beautifully written and highly informative, John Vaillant's book is the "Perfect Storm" and "Into Thin Air" of old-growth coniferous forests of the Pacific Northwest, Western British Columbia, and southeastern Alaska and the development of, and the attendant risks involved in, logging. In particular, the book revolves around an extreme act of protest against the lumber industry committed by a modern-day Paul Bunyan, the ultimate outdoorsman, in the person of Grant Hadwin, who was himself a trained logger but eventually went through a complete mental and spiritual conversion to an environmental advocate. To the perspective of the indigenous people of the Queen Charlotte Islands and tourists who cherished a biological rarity deep in the protected woods, his act was unspeakable and unimaginable. He was about to face justice in Haida Gwaii but decided to do so under the most treacherous circumstances--by paddling a kayak across the dangerous and unpredictable Hecate Strait from Prince Rupert, B.C. in February. His disappearance, as well as his reputation for being a survivor in the formidable wet wilderness of western Canada and southeastern Alaska has made him larger-than-life, a legend. This was no crazy man. Hadwin's eloquent manifesto to the pitfalls of human civilization was not unique but revealed a deep understanding of how our common notions of progress could get us in trouble.
The book's namesake was a rare biological idiosyncrasy indeed. In a language designed for lay reading, the author explains that the genetic mutation affected the protein(s) involved in the alignment of chloroplasts, which in turn responds to the angle of sunlight to maximize photosynthesis. This mutation did not necessarily undermine the viability of the plant; if anything, the plant lived for longer than 300 years--and could have survived longer, if only.... Instead of succumbing to a potentially lethal mutation, the plant lucked out thanks to extrinsic factors that increased its chances for survival. Unfortunately, these factors have been difficult to replicate under controlled conditions and under close watch by horticulturists and forestry specialists at the University of British Columbia, among other locations. Additionally, the plant turned out to be sterile; whether this was a direct or indirect result of the mutation was not elaborated, but that's quite beside the point. One of the best aspects of the book was the detail to which the author described the various attempts to rescue the tree by cloning, grafting, and other techniques. At the conclusion of the book, the reader is left with the hope that someone will succeed in extending the life of this tree through artificial means that are no less remarkable given the specific growth requirements of this individual tree. Whether scientists succeed or not, this tree, which meant so much to different people of different backgrounds and persuasions, not to mention the Haida people themselves, underscores the plasticity and fragility of nature. Even in these most forbidding environments where nature seems to rule, it takes only a brief moment in the life of the forest to see its members fall to oblivion. Sure, the sound of a Western conifer when felled can be stirring, but the power of human greed can be just as stirring--if not downright chilling. Grant Hadwin's gesture was not a tantrum or gesture of human folly. It is a strong symbol for what can go wrong when exploitation is pitted against preservation.
The Golden Spruce
Customer Rating:
John Vaillant's "The Golden Spruce," is a strangely uneven read. Like many other readers, some of whom are Amazon reviewers, I purchased it because of the connection to Jon Krakauer's work.
I do recommend this book. But it comes with a warning: the story line is choppy. There are a number of tangents that Vaillant goes off on. Some are relevant, some not. Some are interesting, some not.
The central theme is of course, "why did forester Grant Hadwin do it?" Vaillant's tale of sleuthing and detective work drives this, the story line. This will be the force that motivates most readers.
Some readers will be disappointed because Vaillant's tale ends without clarity or resolution. Above all, there is much sadness and pain, for Hadwin has committed a deliberate and evil act, designed to hurt. His crime is an act of eco-terrorism inflicted upon native people, for whom the Golden Spruce is not only a "cash-cow," but more importantly a symbol of pride and heritage. Hadwin's crime is a crime against nature and a people, although Vaillant does his best to salvage and explain the twisted logic that may have motivated him.
"The Golden Spruce" is not an easy read. But it is tale you will not soon forget.