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The Wild Trees
  • Published: 29 September 2008
  • ISBN: 9780141918808
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

The Wild Trees

A Story of Passion and Daring with the World's Last True Explorers




'The most inspiring true life adventure I have read for years' David Bellamy

When Steve Sillett was 19 years old, he free-climbed – with no safety equipment and no training – one of the tallest trees on earth, in the redwood forests of Prairie Creek, California. 30 storeys above the ground he glimpsed an undiscovered ecosystem, and his passion for that astonishing world would transform the rest of his life. Over the next twenty years, Sillett and a close group of friends charted this system, discovering mosses and lichen never seen before, and travelling among branches so densely interwoven they form incredible sky-high walkways.

There are only twenty people on earth who have climbed the world’s tallest trees and who know their location. In writing The Wild Trees, Richard Preston not only managed to gain access to this group, but began to climb these hidden giants himself, putting his life in danger in order to understand the powerful connection between the massive trees and the world’s last great explorers.

  • Published: 29 September 2008
  • ISBN: 9780141918808
  • Imprint: Penguin eBooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

About the author

Richard Preston

Richard Preston was born in 1954 in Cambridge, Massachusetts and received a Ph.D from Princeton University. He is the author of The Hot Zone; American Steel (about the Nucor Corporation's project to build a revolutionary steel mill); and First Light (about astronomy and astronomists) which won the American Institute of Physics award in science writing. An asteroid has been named 'Preston' in honour of First Light. Preston is a lump of rock the size of lower Manhattan. It is likely some day to collide with Mars or the Earth. Richard Preston is a regular contributor to The New Yorker, and has won numerous awards, including the AAAS-Westinghouse Award and the McDermott Award in the Arts from MIT.

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Praise for The Wild Trees

A fascinating adventure story

The Sunday Times

Combines the thrill of exploration with the quirkiness of those who chose it as their lives' work

The New York Times

Impressive … these amateurs were taking their lives into their hands every time

London Review of Books

Invokes the spirit of Darwin, Audubon and Jacques Cousteau

Washington Post