I recently ordered the two books by Robin Wall Kimmerer that I have not yet read, Gathering Moss and Braiding Sweetgrass for Young Adults. I had not known about the latter book, which she cowrote with Monique Gray Smith (illustrated by Nicole Neidhardt) until about a week ago when I started digging more deeply online into the wisdom of Kimmerer. The fact that she’s adapted her masterpiece, Braiding Sweetgrass into a manual on reciprocity for young adults has me particularly excited because the sanctuary I am working to create will have a focus on facilitating a connection between the natural world and youth.
Every time I listen to, or read, the words of Robin Wall Kimmerer I become the rapt student. Life distills into essence through her narratives and a feeling of coming home overwhelms my senses. More often than not, I find myself weeping. And here is why: Even though our modernized world tries to rush us towards unfettered “progress,” our cells are continually pulling us back to their origins. They beg us to become rooted into our collective Mother. They plead with us to come home. There is an undeniable longing that awakens when we (re)learn our origin stories, and no one conveys them more eloquently than Kimmerer.
She is master storyteller. Kimmerer’s gift for weaving indigenous and scientific wisdom into compelling narratives draws the listener/reader in so deeply everything else disappears. Her words tug at the threads of DNA that join the solitary life into the web of all lives. One cannot help but feel the longing for reconnection. I am not holding onto an illusion that I can do it perfectly, but if I can nurture a space where the natural world exists in harmony with its human visitors—who are, after all, children of the land—in a way that threads reciprocity into one small piece of our world perhaps a bit of this longing will turn into joy.

The message of this book seems to be what we need in this fast paced world. Thank you for the recommendation, Alethea.
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Hi Miriam, I really do think the world needs this wisdom. I highly recommend all of Kimmerer’s books (and I say that without having yet read two of them). I have been watching some of her discussions on YouTube and her pragmatism is inspiring.
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I hope more people are aware of her books, Alethea.
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I think she’s gaining a good following.
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Nice review that stirs an interest in her books. Thanks Alethea.
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You would love them, Brad. I think you might particularly enjoy The Serviceberry.
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Thanks, I requested it from our library.
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I’m looking forward to hearing what you think about it.
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Me too!
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🙂
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It’s a wonderful idea. I loved “Braiding Sweetgrass”. (K)
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Thank you, K. The Serviceberry is equally exquisite and it has lovely sketches to accompany the prose.
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A lovely recvieve of an author unknown to me thusfar I am following with interest , Alethea we need some calm and guidance in this world 🙂
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We do, Carol. Her books are a balm for the soul. You would enjoy them.
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Robin Wall Kimmerer sounds like a very interesting person. I’ll have to look into her works.
It seems so many people are in an upside-down world where they see only the price of things and never the value.The value of the natural world is so much higher than the resources it contains. Maybe if more people are wakened to this we can save it yet.
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I sure hope so, Trent. I think you would really enjoy her books.
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Your description of how this author moves you is intriguing and compels me to dig deeper. I feel happy for you and wish you all the best for a dream come true. ❤️🙏
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Thank you, JoAnna. 💕
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