officialgrittynhl's review

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adventurous hopeful informative inspiring lighthearted mysterious reflective relaxing medium-paced

4.25

kahawa's review against another edition

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5.0

I really enjoyed this short book on plants. Plants seem much more intelligent (and devious!) than I realised. I knew they were special, but not quite so sophisticated. Also, Mancuso explains plants as plants, not as planty kinds of animals. They can't move, so they have to adapt to the dangers of their environment, not just escape it. I'm wondering now if perhaps plants haven't simply grown animals in order to produce more plants.......

lena_taco's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful informative inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

Man, plants are so cool

vishnu_'s review against another edition

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informative inspiring lighthearted relaxing medium-paced

3.75

riazero's review

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informative inspiring lighthearted medium-paced

3.75

isa_levogira's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

jlbrown23's review against another edition

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1.0

If you buy this book, hopefully you aren't expecting to read much about plants. Or really read much period. For starters - it clocks in at 40,000 words, which is about half the length of a typical short book (to chose a popular example, HP Philosopher's Stone is 77,000 words).

The bigger problem though is that the book is mostly a bunch of tangents that have little to do with plants (or "plant intelligence and behavior", as is explicitly spelled out in THE TITLE OF THE BOOK), and much of it is handwaving hogwash (I have a better word, than hogwash, but am not sure of the language restrictions on goodreads).

An example:

Chapter 5 starts off with a fairly engaging discussion of the ability of certain plants to use odors and chemicals to coerce insects/animals into doing their biding (there is a particularly interesting description of Acacia trees and ants). This lasts for 5 pages, 2 of which are photographs, margins and headings (so really 3 pages). The author then goes on an extended anecdote about people who like hot peppers that is almost entirely "plant intelligence and behavior" free, and in fact doesn't talk much about actual peppers. It contains some musings (random thoughts that the author admits he has no actual data or evidence on) about why people (in his unverified opinion) might like hot peppers. This goes on for TWELVE pages (mercifully 3 are photographs, so really 9 pages). The chapter then wraps up with a 1 page summary that proportionally represents the chapter.

I would say this chapter was somewhere in the middle of the bull.., er, hogwash content for the book. Some were a little better, others were worse, particularly towards the end. But all in all about 25% interesting plant information, 75% tangential information that is sometimes facts (although not about anything to do with plants), sometimes weird assertions that don't appear to be based on facts/data, sometimes his own projects that he describes as successful even though it doesn't really sound like they were in any practical sense. Keep in mind that this is for something half the length of a short book to being with, so not very much cool "plant intelligence and behavior" at all.

Add one star for a really nice layout and graphics (kudos to Kyoko Watanabee, who is listed as responsible for interior design - your design & layout was the one exceptional thing about the book), subtract one star for presenting this as science and fooling non-scientists into thinking these are actual facts and not just the author's musings.

eliannew's review against another edition

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.0

bella_zaga's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring medium-paced

4.5

Wow. An amazing and fun exploration into plant phenomena and how to it connects to technology and innovation. Loved it and learned so much! Serves as a good jumping off point.

dlisab's review against another edition

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hopeful informative reflective medium-paced

4.75

Una lettura leggera ma allo stesso tempo riflessiva, che parla di tematiche importanti, sempre inerenti al mondo vegetale, senza apparire in alcun modo impegnativa. Offre numerosi spunti di riflessione, dal momento che lo scrittore stesso arricchisce il discorso con svariati aneddoti, talvolta simpatici, sul mondo delle piante e sulla propria esperienza personale da ricercatore scientifico. 
Partendo dal mondo vegetale, Mancuso mostra al lettore le possibili applicazioni pratiche dei principi di funzionamento delle piante, in una logica più ampia incentrata sulla necessità di ispirarsi alla natura per trovare le soluzioni ai problemi che ci assillano,
che possono spaziare da problematiche legate ai cambiamenti ambientali, come siccità e mancanza di risorse, a questioni in ambito architettonico, fino addirittura a perplessità che possono interessare la vita del singolo, relative al nostro modo di pensare e di prendere decisioni
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