[A] book which sustained me this year, and seeded some much-needed acreage for hope. . . . This is a book about ecosystem building, about imagining a more beautiful abundance, more life in our lives. It's a book about the fact that it's still possible to heal what's barren or polluted, and that maybe it would be richer, more joyful, and more possible than we imagine, if we could only just begin. . . . [R]ead the book, and remember again the pleasure in saying plant names, in saluting the world, in savoring it. Maybe it will plant some new little seed for you, too.
—Tess Taylor, CNN
Our species now occupies most of the terrestrial parts of earth and our development projects have vast ecological repercussions. In the Anthropocene, the impact has been and continues to be catastrophic because we lack the humility to recognize we are too ignorant to 'manage' Nature. Isabella Tree’s uplifting story of discovering respect and trust in Nature so she can be helped to reflourish is the paradigm shift needed to begin to rewild the planet.
—David Suzuki
Wilding moved me to tears several times, overcome by the beauty of the rejuvenation it describes, the loss of nature it struggles against, and also by the gorgeous clarity of the writing. Wilding is a crucial, important book for everyone to read, especially in how it pushes back against foundational assumptions we all make about wilderness, nature, and how animals live. It is quite simply one of the best books I’ve ever read.
—Jeff VanderMeer
[W]herever you live, there’s a joy in reading Isabella Tree’s detailed descriptions of the flora and fauna that arrived in her vicinity after the rewilding process began . . . [R]eaders . . . will also find an unexpected source of hope.
—Tobias Carroll, Literary Hub
[W]atching nature return to Knepp through Tree's detailed storytelling is inspiring.
—AC Shilton, Sierra
[F]ans of Roger Deakin, Robert Macfarlane, Nan Shepherd, and other British naturalists will follow right along . . . A fine work of environmental literature that demands a tolerance for detail and should inspire others to follow suit.
—Kirkus
By bringing human emotionality to the forefront, Wilding shines a probing light on our relationship with the outdoors.
—Forrest Pritchard, Wall Street Journal
This wonderfully readable book, which is partly a memoir and partly a plan of action, is an inspirational guide for how to "rewild" a landscape. . . . This honest, thoroughly researched and deeply hopeful book will appeal to everyone—especially farmers—who is concerned about how intensive farming practices are degrading the environment and how to restore nature to ravaged lands.
—Forbes, “Ten of the Best Books About Climate Change, Conservation And The Environment of 2018"
Wilding is one of the most exhilarating books I know. Knepp Castle is a modern marvel, a wild ancient landscape in a modern domestic country, a place filled with birds and animals leading their own independent and remarkable lives. Isabella Tree, who lives there, tells the rich, complicated story of Knepp. As a writer, Tree is both elegant and deeply informed, and the story is full of poetic awareness and scientific foundations. This story will delight anyone who's interested in nature, wildlife and hope.
—Roxana Robinson, author of Sweetwater
In a story that is part personal memoir, part work of conservation, Tree reveals the capacity of the wild to reclaim the land—as long as humans step out of the way.
—Smithsonian, "The Ten Best Science Books of 2018"
Wilding is both a timely and important book.
—Tim Flannery, The New York Review of Books
A poignant, practical and moving story of how to fix our broken land, this should be conservation's salvation; this should be its future; this is a new hope.
—Chris Packham
Every farmer (and perhaps every conservationist) in Britain needs to go and spend a day at Knepp. The Knepp "wilding" project is a vitally important experiment for working out what we can do to let nature back into our farmed landscapes. . . . This book tells this vital story and deserves to be widely read.
—James Rebanks, author of A Shepherd's Life
The remarkable story of an astounding transformation.
—George Monbiot
Isabella Tree's apparently quixotic tale of Exmoor ponies, longhorn cattle, red deer and Tamworth pigs roaming free on an aristocratic estate is a hugely important addition to the literature of what can be done to restore soil and soul.
—Caspar Henderson, The Guardian