EBOOK

About
THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER
'A wonderful book' - Tristan Gooley, author of How To Read A Tree
'Unique and thrilling' - Ben Rawlance, author of The Treeline
'A celebration of the oak as nature's masterpiece' - Daniel Lewis, author of Twelve Trees
'A glorious, revelatory tale of a tree that enlarges our world' - Patrick Barkham, author of The Butterfly Isles
The enchanting biography of an ancient tree.
For over two centuries, as rulers have risen and fallen and wars have raged, one majestic oak tree has lived out an epic drama. From germination in 1780 to adapting to the changing climate of the modern age, its struggles and triumphs took place far from human eyes. That is, until one day a young man named Laurent Tillon came across it, and a decades-long relationship began ...
In this dazzling book, biodiversity expert Tillon narrates the story of the tree he calls Quercus. Evoking the richness which is all around us, he reveals that Quercus is embedded in a network of ever-shifting relationships, from close alliances between plants and animals to battles between insects, birds and fungi.
A book of ecology unlike any other, Being An Oak offers a tree-eyed view of life on earth.
Translated by the award-winning translator Jessica Moore. Laurent Tillon (Author)
Laurent Tillon is head of biodiversity at France's National Forestry Office, in charge of drawing up inventories of forest fauna, especially mammals and batrachians.
He is the author of Listening to Nature (Payot, 2018), the bestselling Being An Oak (Actes Sud, 2021), and Night Phantoms: Bats and humans (Actes Sud, 2023).
He lives in the heart of Rambouillet Forest.
Jessica Moore (Translator)
Jessica Moore is an author and Booker-nominated literary translator. She is a former Lannan writer-in-residence and Banff International Literary Translation Centre alumnus, as well as a former VP for the Literary Translators' Association of Canada.
Jessica lives in Toronto, near the shores of Lake Ontario, that inland sea.
THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER A stunning, original book of ecology for fans of Finding the Mother Tree, The Entangled Life and Otherlands from an internationally bestselling author. Nature writing which centres trees remain perennially popular, proven by recent successes such as How To Read A Tree. This will book will have a beautiful package, including twenty-five hand-drawn illustrations throughout. A wonderful, poetic book that will make you eager to understand the secret relationships between Quercus and all living creatures - including ourselves. Marvellous .... A well-deserved success in bookshops. A very beautiful book. Full of humour and empathy. 'A delightful book that turns a tree into a wonderful lens' 'Rooted in myth and memory, the English oak stands as both sentinel and storyteller. Tillon brings the oak's long cultural and scientific history to life, exploring and celebrating the the tree's ecological might-its deep roots, resilient heartwood, and quiet symbiosis with other species. In the process, Tillon offers up a celebration of the oak as nature's masterpiece' A glorious, revelatory tale of a tree that enlarges our world - animating the fascinating and overlooked relationships between species other than our own
'A wonderful book' - Tristan Gooley, author of How To Read A Tree
'Unique and thrilling' - Ben Rawlance, author of The Treeline
'A celebration of the oak as nature's masterpiece' - Daniel Lewis, author of Twelve Trees
'A glorious, revelatory tale of a tree that enlarges our world' - Patrick Barkham, author of The Butterfly Isles
The enchanting biography of an ancient tree.
For over two centuries, as rulers have risen and fallen and wars have raged, one majestic oak tree has lived out an epic drama. From germination in 1780 to adapting to the changing climate of the modern age, its struggles and triumphs took place far from human eyes. That is, until one day a young man named Laurent Tillon came across it, and a decades-long relationship began ...
In this dazzling book, biodiversity expert Tillon narrates the story of the tree he calls Quercus. Evoking the richness which is all around us, he reveals that Quercus is embedded in a network of ever-shifting relationships, from close alliances between plants and animals to battles between insects, birds and fungi.
A book of ecology unlike any other, Being An Oak offers a tree-eyed view of life on earth.
Translated by the award-winning translator Jessica Moore. Laurent Tillon (Author)
Laurent Tillon is head of biodiversity at France's National Forestry Office, in charge of drawing up inventories of forest fauna, especially mammals and batrachians.
He is the author of Listening to Nature (Payot, 2018), the bestselling Being An Oak (Actes Sud, 2021), and Night Phantoms: Bats and humans (Actes Sud, 2023).
He lives in the heart of Rambouillet Forest.
Jessica Moore (Translator)
Jessica Moore is an author and Booker-nominated literary translator. She is a former Lannan writer-in-residence and Banff International Literary Translation Centre alumnus, as well as a former VP for the Literary Translators' Association of Canada.
Jessica lives in Toronto, near the shores of Lake Ontario, that inland sea.
THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER A stunning, original book of ecology for fans of Finding the Mother Tree, The Entangled Life and Otherlands from an internationally bestselling author. Nature writing which centres trees remain perennially popular, proven by recent successes such as How To Read A Tree. This will book will have a beautiful package, including twenty-five hand-drawn illustrations throughout. A wonderful, poetic book that will make you eager to understand the secret relationships between Quercus and all living creatures - including ourselves. Marvellous .... A well-deserved success in bookshops. A very beautiful book. Full of humour and empathy. 'A delightful book that turns a tree into a wonderful lens' 'Rooted in myth and memory, the English oak stands as both sentinel and storyteller. Tillon brings the oak's long cultural and scientific history to life, exploring and celebrating the the tree's ecological might-its deep roots, resilient heartwood, and quiet symbiosis with other species. In the process, Tillon offers up a celebration of the oak as nature's masterpiece' A glorious, revelatory tale of a tree that enlarges our world - animating the fascinating and overlooked relationships between species other than our own