Tree Spirits Grass Spirits
Written between April 2012 and November 2013, Tree Spirits Grass Spirits adopts a non-linear narrative flow that mimics the growth of plants, and can be read as a companion piece to Ito's beloved poem "Wild Grass on the Riverbank". Rather than the vertiginously violent poetics of the latter, Tree Spirits Grass Spirits serves as what we might call a phyto-autobiography: a recounting of one's life through the logic of flora. Ito's graciously potent and philosophical prose examines immigration, language, gender, care work, and death, all through her close (indeed, at times obsessive) attention to plant life.
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Become an affiliate"Finding the humanity in the plant world, these evocative essays will take root in readers' minds."―Publishers Weekly
"These ambient poems about the flora of the California desert and Kumamoto, Japan are philosophical meditations on the peculiarity of human storytelling and naming practices... Ito's poems suggest that the ways we humans look at plants contain information about how we produce both selves and others as well as narratives about death and transformation." ―Angela Hume
"Hiromi Ito's Tree Spirits Grass Spirits, beautifully translated by Jon L Pitt, is my new favorite book. Maybe my old favorite too. Because I feel like I have, all along, been dreaming about it: a travelogue into the intimate relationship--and the sympathetic oblivion--between the changeless yet always changing world of plants, the always changing yet changeless mind of a poet, and the nature of their disappearance into each other's spirits." ―Brandon Shimoda
"...Ito's insightful prose addresses the connective space between the human and the more-than-human world. In her delicate style, full of wonder and memory, Ito's botanical world becomes meaningfully entangled with preciousness and resiliency that may offer a clue to the common fate of all life on earth." --Obi Kaufmann