Journalist Marguerite Holloway arrives at the Women’s Tree Climbing Workshop as a climbing novice, but with a passion for trees and a deep concern about their future. Run by twin sister tree doctors Bear LeVangie and Melissa LeVangie Ingersoll, the workshop helps people—from everyday tree lovers to women arborists working in a largely male industry—develop impressive technical skills and ascend into the canopy. As Holloway tackles unfamiliar equipment and dizzying heights, she learns about the science of trees and tells the stories of charismatic species. She spotlights experts chronicling the great dying that is underway in forests around the world as trees face simultaneous and accelerating threats. As she climbs, Holloway also comes to understand the profound significance of trees in her relationship with her late mother and brother. The book’s rousing final chapter offers something new: a grander environmental and arboreal optimism. A lyrical work of memoir and reportage, Take to the Trees sounds the alarm about rapid arboreal decline while also offering hope about how we might care for our forests and ourselves.

There are books that inform, and then there are books that rewire the way you see the world. Marguerite Holloway’s Take to the Trees does both—quietly, urgently, beautifully ... It’s a call to action wrapped in a love letter to the natural world. It will stay with you long after the last page—not just as a book you read, but as a path you began walking.—Open Kimono Publishing

One of Heatmap’s Climate Books to Read in 2025

One of Apple Books most anticipated spring non-fiction titles

“Like the trees that it centers, this wonder of a book soars, oxygenates, roots, connects, and awes. It’s a paean to all things arboreal, a memoir about loss and community, and a call to engage in acts of caretaking for our trees and for each other. To do any one of these things well would have made for a good book; to do them all beautifully is a true gift.”

—Ed Yong, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of I Contain Multitudes and Immense Worlds

Powerful and moving, Take to the Trees will resonate with anyone looking for ways to live with optimism and courage through our current era. Just as Marguerite Holloway literally climbs into trees and finds herself, so too does the book explore the connections between trees and the branches of our lives—from the visible canopy to the substantive roots.”

—Alexandra Horowitz, author of Inside of a Dog and The Year of the Puppy

“Take to the Trees invites us to contemplate pushing past our own limits up into the treetops, as well as respecting the guidance of trees. I learned much from this wise book, and can only hope that many readers follow this writer up into the highest branches, to gain an understanding of where we are planted on this earth. Holloway’s insights are urgent and necessary.”

—Sarah Ruhl, MacArthur fellow, playwright, and author of Smile

“Take to the Trees is as lyrical and energetic a book as its title would suggest. In this hybrid of participatory journalism, environmental essay, and family memoir, Marguerite Holloway moves with effortless grace among her literary genres, and in so doing teaches us not only the facts but also the poetry of the natural world. One can’t finish this wonderful book without seeing the nonhuman world with new eyes.”

—Darcy Frey, author of The Last Shot


In her powerful and affecting book, Marguerite Holloway makes a case for how caretaking trees is really caretaking ourselves, and each other.”

—Florence Williams, author of The Nature Fix

The book in part is a sad tale of the damage we have done, but when Marguerite Holloway herself takes to the trees and learns from those who work with them, she plants the seeds of reconciliation between people and the nonhuman world. Readers should take the title literally and do likewise.”

—William Bryant Logan, author of Sprout Lands


 PHOTO BY ALEX HODOR-LEE

Marguerite Holloway has written about the environment and science for publications including the New York Times, The New Yorker, Audubon, Wired and Scientific American, where she was a long-time writer and editor. She is a professor and the Director of Science and Environmental Journalism at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. She lives in New York City.

Writing

Events

UPCOMING 

October 6
New England Chapter of the International Society of Arboriculture
Southbridge, Massachusetts

October 10
Bank Square Books
@ Wilcox Park

4:00 p.m.
Westerly, Rhode Island

October 16
Wellesley Books
7:00 p.m.
Wellesley, Massachusetts

November 7
Symposium Books
7:00 p.m.
Providence, Rhode Island

November 20
The Scientific American
2025 Nonfiction Panel
7:30 p.m.
Greenlight Bookstore

Brooklyn, New York

~~~~~~~
2026

February 18
Magers & Quinn Booksellers
Minneapolis, Minnesota

April 24
Berkshire Botanical Garden
Stockbridge, Massachusetts

September 6
Mountain Top Arboretum
Tannersville, New York

~~~~~~~

PAST

May 7
New England Independent Booksellers Association
Hartford, Connecticut  

May 10
One Grand Books
Against Nature: Floods, Forests & the Fossil Fuel Age
Panel with authors Justin Nobel and Jennifer Kabat
Narrowsburg, NY 12764

May 13
Book Culture
New York, NY

May 21
American Horticultural Society

July 31
Tattered Cover Book Store
Denver, Colorado

August 6
Longfellow Books
@ Mechanics’ Hall

Portland, Maine

August 7
Andover Bookstore
Andover, Massachusetts

August 8
Brookline Booksmith
Brookline, Massachusetts

August 20
East End Books
Provincetown, Massachusetts

August 21
Porter Square Books
Cambridge, Massachusetts

August 22
Merck Forest & Farmland Center
Rupert, Vermont

August 23
Northshire Bookstore
Manchester, Vermont

August 24
Balin Books
at Beaver Brook Association
Nashua, New Hampshire

August 25
The Norwich Bookstore
Norwich, Vermont

October 2
Trees New York
Meet the Author

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Contact

AGENT
Anna Sproul-Latimer of Neon Literary

W. W. NORTON
Erin Sinesky Lovett