Reverent Flora: The Arabian Desert’s Botanical Bounty To pay by check please use this order form. We are pleased to take orders from retailers. Email us with details about your order or call us at 207-837-5760. Reverent Flora: The Arabian Desert’s Botanical Bounty is a collection of poetry that catalogues the Arabian Desert’s critically endangered, disappearing flora while promoting caretaking of the earth. Living for two decades at the edge of the Arabian Desert, poet Diana Woodcock became interested in local and global conservation issues, as well as in the environmental ethic of the Qur’an. In anticipation of the opening of Qatar’s UNESCO-sponsored Qur’anic Botanic Garden—the purpose of which is to maintain for scientific and educational purposes a living collection of Qatar’s 270-plus indigenous plants and to showcase the 52 mentioned more than once in the Qur’an—the author began writing poems that feature the ecology and flora of the region, which is in the throes of a major environmental calamity. Reverent Flora inspires a greater appreciation of and commitment to protecting not only the unique environment of the Arabian Peninsula, but also other equally endangered ecosystems around the world. POETRY / General ISBN: 978-1-962082-48-8 (print; softcover; perfect bound) Released April 22, 2025 | Copyright 2025 162 pages |
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“The elements of the desert are each, like William Blake’s ‘grain of sand in Lambeth,’ a visionary commentary and a prophetic disclosure of Creation in its severe, abundant Fact. In Reverent Flora, Diana Woodcock amplifies this severe abundance into a new form, a new sacrament of praise. And this praise is in itself prophetic, and in itself a greater love. Here is a book of radiant attention.” “The plants of Diana Woodcock’s Reverent Flora: The Arabian Desert’s Botanical Bounty are sometimes defined by science, often act as spiritual instruments, and usually offer health and nutrition. But they are always heroic and vibrant, and they somehow manage to sidestep the categories human culture assigns them . . . Here’s ‘a toast,’ then, to Diana Woodcock and to the moonseeds and jujube and ‘the smallest blossom opening / briefly . . . / to take us all the way to heaven.’” “The poems in Diana Woodcock’s Reverent Flora: The Arabian Desert’s Botanic Bounty achieve something remarkable: They make the desert bloom . . . With the sensibility of a Romantic poet and the precision of a scientist, Woodcock examines the surprising richness of the desert’s plant life, weaving the region’s language, religion, literature, and culture into its climate and geography . . . [In] her exploration of ‘The Twenty-two Most Mentioned Plants in the Quran,’ Woodcock’s meticulous attention to detail breathes imaginative life into the land and its cultivation.” “From our perspective, we can’t have too many science poems in response to a non-scientific political age. Buy a copy and place it where people will pick it up and read it.” |
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