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Tree Thieves

Crime and Survival in North America's Woods

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"An absorbing true-crime story and a fascinating examination of the deep and troubled relationship between people and forests."
—Michelle Nijhuis, author of Beloved Beasts

A fast-paced investigation into timber poaching that reveals why stealing trees has become a billion-dollar industry.

Deep in the thickets of North America's most ancient woodland, timber poachers are felling some of the last remaining old-growth on our continent. Redwoods, cedar, and Douglas fir trees are all victims of poaching. Sold on the black market, they end up in our homes as furniture, souvenirs, and firewood. Stealing timber is a lucrative crime, valued at $1 billion annually. One forest in the West experienced so much poaching that it was declared an "epidemic."

Starting in northern California, Tree Thieves follows a group of poachers into the backwoods of the Pacific Northwest, tracking cases of timber poaching from crime to market. In a story rooted in the materials of our everyday life, National Geographic Explorer Lyndsie Bourgon contextualizes poaching as a side effect of unemployment and deep poverty. In her page-turning and compassionate account, Bourgon opens our eyes to why a person might choose to endanger the ancient, wild landscapes we have worked so hard to protect.

Published in Partnership with the David Suzuki Foundation

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 25, 2022
      Historian Bourgon explores the lucrative and complex crime of timber poaching in her fascinating debut. An estimated $1 billion worth of wood is poached annually in North America alone, Bourgon writes, and while the forest was once seen as “a common source of commodities or privileges,” there’s long been a tension resulting from conservation efforts and private forest management initiatives that too often “disregard and marginalize the working-class people who not only live among the trees but rely on them to survive.” As well, historically, the creation of national and state parks displaced Indigenous and logging communities throughout the Pacific Northwest, and broader industry declines led to widespread job loss and an increase in poverty levels in logging communities. As such, Bourgon posits that timber poaching can be “an act to reclaim one’s place in a rapidly changing world” and promotes changing forest management policies so that they take into account the communities involved. Bourgon’s thoughtful approach and sharp investigative reporting will give environmentalists, policymakers, and park lovers a new perspective on the consequences of prioritizing endangered environments at the expense of the people who live in them. Nature lovers, take note.

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