When Trees Testify
Science, Wisdom, History, and America’s Black Botanical Legacy
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How the Word Is Passed meets Braiding Sweetgrass in a cultural and personal reclamation of Black history and Black botanical mastery, told through the stories of long-lived trees.
The histories of trees in America are also the histories of Black Americans. Pecan trees were domesticated by an enslaved African named Antoine; sycamore trees were both havens and signposts for people trying to escape enslavement; poplar trees are historically associated with lynching; and willow bark has offered the gift of medicine. These trees, and others, testify not only to the complexity of the Black American narrative but also to a heritage of Black botanical expertise that, like Native American traditions, predates the United States entirely.
In When Trees Testify, award-winning plant biologist Beronda L. Montgomery explores the way seven trees—as well as the cotton shrub—are intertwined with Black history and culture. She reveals how knowledge surrounding these trees has shaped America since the very beginning. As Montgomery shows, trees are material witnesses to the lives of enslaved Africans and their descendants.
Combining the wisdom of science and history with stories from her own path to botany, Montgomery talks to majestic trees, and in this unique and compelling narrative, they answer.
©2026 Beronda L. Montgomery (P)2026 Macmillan Audio批評家のレビュー
“We have been waiting for this. A botanical memoir, a history, a history with a Black lens—that takes us from roots to branches giving us the keys to an alternative retelling of American landscape and the ways plants mark who we are and where we've been. This is an electric, bold weaving of ethnobotany, personal memoir, spirit and science and I am here for it.”—Michael Twitty, author of The Cooking Gene and Koshersoul
“Absolutely essential reading for anyone interested in the convergences of human and plant lives. Full of joy, sorrow, and brilliant insight, this book forever changed how I think about trees and American ecology and history. Black botanical legacies, and their vitally important roles in culture and ecology today, are vividly evoked in this extraordinary weave of biology, history, and memoir.”—David George Haskell, biologist and two-time Pulitzer Prize-finalist for The Forest Unseen and Sounds Wild and Broken