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Good Reads  Botany  Plants & Botany: Biology & Ecology

How Flowers Made Our World The Story of Nature's Revolutionaries

Popular Science New
By: David George Haskell(Author), Lucy Smith(Illustrator)
331 pages, b/w chapter headings
Publisher: Torva
How Flowers Made Our World
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  • How Flowers Made Our World ISBN: 9781911709985 Hardback Mar 2026 Expected delivery 27th April - 30th April
    £22.00
    #269811 | Stock: 0
Price: £22.00
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

In How Flowers Made Our World, biologist David George Haskell redefines our understanding of flowers, casting them as powerful revolutionaries at the heart of Earth's story.

Far from being mere ornaments, flowers have shaped the very fabric of life on our planet. Their evolution triggered a cascade of biodiversity, transforming oceans, creating new habitats, and even altering the climate. Their beauty turned adversaries into allies, and their adaptability turned environmental upheavals into opportunities for renewal.

Weaving together vivid storytelling, lyrical writing, and cutting-edge science, Haskell illuminates flowers as portals into deep time and essential players in our ecological future. He reveals how flowers built and sustained ecosystems from rainforests to prairies and have been pivotal in the evolution of species like butterflies, bees, and birds. He also uncovers their crucial role in human history, as cultural emblems, keys to scientific leaps, and evolutionary catalysts, with flowering grasses calling our ancestors to leave the trees, laying the foundation for agriculture and modern civilization.

From lessons in resilience and creativity found among gardeners' favourites, such as magnolias, orchids, and roses, to rediscovering lesser-known wonders, like our uncelebrated underwater meadows that sustain life and the secrets of our most humble wildflowers, How Flowers Made Our World invites readers to see these blooms in a whole new light – as the dynamic and influential forces they truly are.

Customer Reviews

Biography

David Haskell is a writer and biologist, adjunct professor of environmental sciences at Emory University and a Guggenheim Fellow. Known for his integration of science, lyrical writing and close observation of the living world, he has twice been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction, for The Forest Unseen and Sounds Wild and Broken. In 2024, the American Academy of Arts and Letters granted him an Award in Literature.

Popular Science New
By: David George Haskell(Author), Lucy Smith(Illustrator)
331 pages, b/w chapter headings
Publisher: Torva
Media reviews

"Haskell's love for flowers shines off the page [...] deeply researched, rich with insights and often vivid – with much to recommend it."
– Michael Marshall, New Scientist

"A work of real passion [...] a trustworthy companion, rational but not entirely rationalist, knowledgeable but understanding of what the ignorant need to know, expert but – and this may be a surprising word for a book of popular biology – kind [...]You feel like cheering. More Haskells, please, and more flowers."
– Adam Nicolson, New York Times

"A fascinating examination of the enormous impact that flowering plants have had on all life [...] An edifying celebration"
Kirkus Reviews, - starred review

"In this dazzling book, scintillating with wonder and scholarship, Haskell shows us how flowers – so often belittled and misunderstood, have shaped ecology, and so shaped us. Flowers are tectonic, and here is a book worthy of them."
– Charles Foster, author of The Edges of the World

"A tender portrait of flowering plants as powerful agents of change. Flowers wield beauty as a world-making force, actively shaping the planet – and, by extension, us. This book is a joyful exhortation to floral reverence, and brims with curiosity, humour, and crystal-clear scientific delights. We are all more in sway of flowers than we think. Richly precise, How Flowers Made Our World is a celebration of the inventiveness of floral life."
– Zoë Schlanger, author of The Light Eaters, staff writer, The Atlantic

"David George Haskell's great strength as a writer is that he is open to surprise. He regards the planet as a strange and beautiful place. How Flowers Made Our World is at once closely observed, richly reported, and mind-blowing."
– Elizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction

"'Who runs the world? Girls!' sang Beyonce a while back, but really it's flowers and flowering plants that run this world and have for more than a hundred million years. In this vividly written book, David George Haskell shows how they do that, how flowering plants made the modern world from prairies and rainforests to bees and butterflies, how the most trivialized part of the natural world is among its most powerful and essential."
– Rebecca Solnit, writer, historian, and activist, author of Orwell's Roses

"Flowering plants as you've never seen them before: these flowers are the sneaky, sexy, volatile, opportunistic rebels of the vegetal world. They turned the planet on its head and, as David George Haskell demonstrates so masterfully, they have so much still to teach us. Science writing with sensuality, sensitivity and soul."
– Cal Flyn, author of Islands of Abandonment

"In his illuminating and entertaining How Flowers Made Our World: The Story of Nature’s Revolutionaries, [Haskell] combines meticulous, extensive research with irresistible enthusiasm [...] Each chapter is rife with fascinating information"
Bookpage starred review

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