The Overstory

The Overstory

2018 • 502 pages

Ratings239

Average rating4.1

15

I loved this for the first hundred pages, but the rest was a bit of a slog. And I have some issues with the way things wrapped up.

Philosophically, I absolutely resonate with the messages in this book: human progress is killing us all and the world in which we live. But:

To have Neelay's plot end with the shining hope of machine learning being humanity's way of understanding our world is boring at best, and downright irresponsible at worst. Silicon Valley and its techno-fascism is one of the most destructive forces in our world. It is not the way to a better future.

And to have some Magical Native Americans appear in the last few pages to help some white dude with his art project is eye-rollingly exploitative, especially after reading an entire book about coexisting with nature that never mentions the indigenous people who better understood and lived that existence before their genocide began centuries ago.

Also! There was a hint that Neelay might be queer, and Mimi was theoretically too, I guess, but these tiny bits of representation in an otherwise very white, straight book felt cheap.

September 6, 2020