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The Gospel of Trees

A Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In an "eye-opening memoir" (People) "as beautiful as it is discomfiting" (The New Yorker), award-winning writer Apricot Irving untangles her youth on a missionary compound in Haiti.
Apricot Irving grew up as a missionary's daughter in Haiti. Her father was an agronomist, a man who hiked alone into the deforested hills to preach the gospel of trees. Her mother and sisters spent their days in the confines of the hospital compound they called home. As a child, this felt like paradise to Irving; as a teenager, it became a prison. Outside of the walls of the missionary enclave, Haiti was a tumult of bugle-call bus horns and bicycles that jangled over hard-packed dirt, road blocks and burning tires triggered by political upheaval, the clatter of rain across tin roofs, and the swell of voices running ahead of the storm.

Poignant and explosive, Irving weaves a portrait of a missionary family that is unflinchingly honest: her father's unswerving commitment to his mission, her mother's misgivings about his loyalty, the brutal history of colonization. Drawing from research, interviews, and journals—her parents' as well as her own—this memoir in many voices evokes a fractured family finding their way to kindness through honesty.

Told against the backdrop of Haiti's long history of intervention, it grapples with the complicated legacy of those who wish to improve the world, while bearing witness to the defiant beauty of an undefeated country. A lyrical meditation on trees and why they matter, loss and privilege, love and failure. The Gospel of Trees is a "lush, emotional debut...A beautiful memoir that shows how a family altered by its own ambitious philanthropy might ultimately find hope in their faith and love for each other, and for Haiti." (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 11, 2017
      In this lush, emotional debut memoir, Irving tells of her life as a missionary’s daughter in Haiti. Irving was born in California, but in 1982, at age six, her parents moved her and her sister to Haiti. Years of destructive colonization had left Haiti with severe deforestation, and her father began an ambitious mission to plant trees. Irving unflinchingly evaluates the consequences of well-meaning humanitarian work, which often included the perpetuation of oppressive colonial structures. She writes, “There is, in colonial literature, a recurring image: a foreign man, emboldened by his authority and by the lack of accountability, takes on a native mistress as a token of both his unquestioned power and his affection.” Amid the poverty in Haiti, Irving finds a “more complicated world where sorrow and beauty lived under the same leaky roof.” There, Irving wrestled with the prescriptions of her Christian beliefs, ultimately discovering a deeper faith in something else—that of beauty. “Beauty, it seemed, had been here all along: a wild summons, a name for God that did not stick in my throat.” This is a beautiful memoir that shows how a family altered by its own ambitious philanthropy might ultimately find hope in their faith and love for each other, and for Haiti.

    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2018
      A missionary's daughter recounts her childhood experiences in Haiti.Debut author Irving, a past contributor to This American Life, was 6 years old when her family first moved from Oregon to Haiti in the early 1980s. Together with her parents and two younger sisters, they spent much of the next decade striving to improve the living conditions of a region experiencing unrelenting social upheaval and drought. The family was led by the fierce determination of their agronomist father. "My father's vision for utopia," writes the author, "was agrarian: trees on every hillside, vegetables in every garden, water in every dry streambed. Seeds were small, but they could change the world." As the narrative progresses, the focal point becomes the author's conflicting relationship with her father and how it related to his idealistic vision for the country and his family. Irving draws from their various journals, each offering a distinct slant on her experiences of that time and place. She reveals how her parents' moral and religious zeal intersected and at times clashed with the harsh realities they faced each day in an uncompromising setting. "If, like my father, you suffer from a savior complex," writes the author, "Haiti is a bleak assignment, but if you are able to enter it unguarded, shielded only by curiosity, you will find the sorrows entangled with a defiant joy." In the lengthy final section, Irving tracks some of the changes in the region from her vantage point as a young woman returning after a 10-year absence. Later, she would assess further hardships in the capacity of a journalist assigned to cover the aftermath of the devastating 2010 earthquake. Throughout the book, Irving reveals a journalist's seasoned eye for nuanced regional detail, but her personal journey is surprisingly uninvolving and frequently bogged down by self-consciousness. A tighter edit, including a significant page-count reduction, may have resulted in a more authentically compelling story.A timely and often insightful perspective on modern-day Haiti woven into an overlong and banal family saga.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2018

      Writer and journalist Irving (This American Life) presents a reflective memoir focused on her childhood in Haiti with her Baptist missionary parents. Between the ages of six to 15, Irving mainly lived in a missionary compound in Limbe, northern Haiti, near the busy Good Samaritan Hospital. Irving's father was an idealistic agronomist, whose ambitious plans to help reforest Haiti, improve the soil, and reduce erosion often ended in terrible frustration, despite his dedication. Struggling with the challenges of missionary life and occasional Haitian political instability, Irving navigated a bumpy adolescence marked by episodes of family discord. Yet, the author was buoyed by adventure, beauty, resilience, and social connections found amid the missionary group and Haitian friends. Irving's work also sheds light on the underlying causes and consequences of Haiti's poverty and poor access to medical care. While providing a useful view of the inherent ethical and moral ambiguities of well-meaning but sometimes ineffective charitable interventions in Haiti, Irving's meandering autobiography often feels unfocused and circuitous. VERDICT Best suited to serious readers interested in Haiti or the lives of missionary children and families.--Ingrid Levin, Salve Regina Univ. Lib., Newport, RI

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2018
      In the church newsletter, they looked like the perfect missionary family: Dad, Mom, and three daughters, dedicated to their agricultural and reforestation work in Haiti. But as Irving discloses in this searching memoir, the story beneath the surface was more complicated. Her father's enthusiasm for rejuvenating the devastated island nation's ecology ends in frustration at the many obstacles he faces trying to make his vision a reality, including acts of opposition from the residents. Her mother, isolated and dispirited, questions their mission, and while the region is a tropical paradise for seven-year-old Apricot, when she returns as a teenager, it feels different, even dangerous. For a family that lived in a trailer in California, missionary work comes with an unexpected whiff of privilege, as they hire servants and enjoy luxuries unavailable to many of the locals. With insight and admirable even-handedness, Irving shows the complex forces at play in both the story of Haiti's cycle of poverty and the more personal dynamics at play in her family as they struggle mightily to do God's work.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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