cover image Love, Nature, Magic: Shamanic Journeys into the Heart of My Garden

Love, Nature, Magic: Shamanic Journeys into the Heart of My Garden

Maria Rodale. Chelsea Green, $28 (240p) ISBN 978-1-645-02171-1

Rodale (Organic Manifesto), former CEO of the Rodale publishing company, recalls her attempts to connect with nature in this quirky offering. After trying to eradicate an especially persistent strain of mugwort weed from her Pennsylvania garden, Rodale embarked on a shamanic quest to understand what the plant was trying to communicate to her. An avid gardener who’d been studying shamanism, she determined she could better understand her natural surroundings by communing with spirits in other realms, and here discusses tuning in to the spirits of mugwort, thistles, dandelions, ticks, and more. Lightning bugs remind her that “beauty isn’t how you look, but the light you give off,” which Rodale takes as a useful rebuke of an image-conscious society. Mugwort instructs her to abandon the “need to control nature” and instead appreciate its “surprises and gifts,” while even the maligned poison ivy “teach[es] humans to pay attention” and “watch where [they] are going.” Rodale’s passion for the natural world shines through, and while certain revelations are less than revelatory (“Yew continued, ‘People are always trying... to keep us in boxes. But it’s them that are boxed in’ ”), many of her other musings will prove thought-provoking to spiritualists with an environmental bent. It’s an eclectic and eye-opening entry. (Feb.)