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16k reviews for:
A maravilhosa trama das coisas: Sabedoria indígena, conhecimento científico e os ensinamentos das plantas
Robin Wall Kimmerer
16k reviews for:
A maravilhosa trama das coisas: Sabedoria indígena, conhecimento científico e os ensinamentos das plantas
Robin Wall Kimmerer
This is the most beautiful book i have ever read! Kimmerer illustrates beautifully how destructive capitalism is to both nature and to our connection to the land. She shows us how indigenous people have lived communally for a very long time, and how private property is an unnatural concept.
I don’t think this book alone will turn someone anti-capitalist, but it is a deeply inspiring read for someone with an already anti-capitalist worldview.
I don’t think this book alone will turn someone anti-capitalist, but it is a deeply inspiring read for someone with an already anti-capitalist worldview.
Beautiful book. How you view life will be changed… unless you already have this view. I’d recommend.
emotional
hopeful
inspiring
reflective
slow-paced
I really liked this book. There were some chapters that I liked better than others, but the ones I liked were very impactful for me. The writing was straight forward, but also beautiful.
adventurous
challenging
emotional
informative
inspiring
reflective
medium-paced
This book changed my thought processes and my brain chemistry in a way I truly can't explain. This one goes on the all time favorites list, no question. I wish I could get everyone to read this book, but only if they were truly open to it.
Robin Wall Kimmerer is an amazing author and narrator. Each chapter feels like opening up a whole new world and world view in a way that is poignant, refreshing, and necessary. She weaves in her indigenous heritage and knowledge with her expertise as a botanist in a way that is both beautiful and approachable. I learned so much from this book about gratitude, about the importance of acknowledging the earth, plants, and animals and understanding that humans are not, in fact, a superior being but instead that we have much to learn from our non-human brothers and sisters who have been here far longer than us and have helped the world thrive for millions of years instead of poisoning and destroying it. I have learned about giving, about reciprocity, about listening. This book is rife with urgent but gentle lessons.
A few quotes that stuck with me:
“We say that humans have the least experience with how to live, and thus the most to learn. We must look to our teachers among the other species for guidance…they have been on the earth far longer than we have been and have had time to figure things out.”
“I hope I am also teaching them to know the world as a neighborhood of non-human residents.”
“We are linked in a co-evolutionary circle…food, plants, and people act as selective forces on each other’s evolution. The thriving of one in the interest of the other. This to me sounds a bit like love."
“Against the backdrop of that history, an invitation to settler society to become indigenous to place feels like a housebreaking party. It could be read as an open invitation to take what little is left. Can settlers be trusted…to walk so that each step is a greeting to Mother Earth?”
“Your strange hunger for ease should not mean a death sentence for the rest of creation.”
I am humbled by this book and it has truly altered the way I see the world. I also feel it is a book with so much content that I would learn even more on a re-read.
Robin Wall Kimmerer is an amazing author and narrator. Each chapter feels like opening up a whole new world and world view in a way that is poignant, refreshing, and necessary. She weaves in her indigenous heritage and knowledge with her expertise as a botanist in a way that is both beautiful and approachable. I learned so much from this book about gratitude, about the importance of acknowledging the earth, plants, and animals and understanding that humans are not, in fact, a superior being but instead that we have much to learn from our non-human brothers and sisters who have been here far longer than us and have helped the world thrive for millions of years instead of poisoning and destroying it. I have learned about giving, about reciprocity, about listening. This book is rife with urgent but gentle lessons.
A few quotes that stuck with me:
“We say that humans have the least experience with how to live, and thus the most to learn. We must look to our teachers among the other species for guidance…they have been on the earth far longer than we have been and have had time to figure things out.”
“I hope I am also teaching them to know the world as a neighborhood of non-human residents.”
“We are linked in a co-evolutionary circle…food, plants, and people act as selective forces on each other’s evolution. The thriving of one in the interest of the other. This to me sounds a bit like love."
“Against the backdrop of that history, an invitation to settler society to become indigenous to place feels like a housebreaking party. It could be read as an open invitation to take what little is left. Can settlers be trusted…to walk so that each step is a greeting to Mother Earth?”
“Your strange hunger for ease should not mean a death sentence for the rest of creation.”
I am humbled by this book and it has truly altered the way I see the world. I also feel it is a book with so much content that I would learn even more on a re-read.
challenging
emotional
informative
inspiring
reflective
medium-paced
One of the most eye opening books I have read since college. Don’t expect to look at the world the same after reading this
informative
inspiring
reflective
slow-paced
hopeful
informative
medium-paced
I enjoyed the book but only read about a third of it somewhat because i wasn't that engaged and partially because I ran out of time at the library. Interesting. Don't know if I'll pick up again. Maybe not.
adventurous
challenging
emotional
informative
reflective
I listened to the audiobook and loved her storytelling. I learned a lot about Indigenous wisdom and culture and find myself more reflective of my own gratitude for the earth and how I can better repay it.