He analyses the intriguing parallels between plant and human senses in chapters devoted to what a plant sees, smells, feels, hears and remembers. It gives a whole new meaning to forget-me-nots.
Herald Sun
‘Chamovitz walks the Homo sapiens reader right into the shoes — or I should say roots — of the plant world. After reading this book you will never again walk innocently past a plant or reach insensitively for a leaf. You will marvel and be haunted by a plant's sensory attributes and the shared genes between the plant and animals kingdoms.’
Elisabeth Tova Bailey, author of The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating
‘What a Plant Knows is lively, eloquent, scientifically accurate, and easy to read. I commend this engaging text to all who wonder about life on earth and seek a compelling introduction to the lives of plants as revealed through centuries of careful scientific experimentation.’
Professor Stephen D. Hopper, director, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
‘A fascinating book that explores accessibly the evidence that plants share more properties with animals than most people appreciate. It may come as a relief to vegetarians to learn that plants do not feel pain or suffer, in the human sense, when harvested. Nevertheless, after reading What a Plant Knows, we wanted to apologise to our daffodils for the times when our shadows have shielded them from the Sun.’
John and Mary Gribbin, authors of The Flower Hunters
‘By comparing human senses to the abilities of plants to adapt to their surroundings, the author provides a fascinating and logical explanation of how plants survive despite the inability to move from one site to another. Backed by new research on plant biology, this is an intriguing look at a plant's consciousness.’
Kirkus
‘The reader … will find enough absorbing science to concede that plants continue to inspire and amaze us. It's time, as Joni Mitchell sang at Woodstock, 'to get ourselves back to the garden' and take a closer look at plants.’
The Wall Street Journal
‘This elegantly written account of plant biology will change the way you see your garden … Chamovitz lets us see plants in a new light, one which reveals their true wonder.’
The Guardian
‘Thick with eccentric plant experiments and astonishing plant science.’
Sunday Times (UK)
Like us, a plant that aspires to win the rat race must exploit its environment. Even a daffodil can detect when you're standing in its light, and a rhododendron knows when you're savaging its neighbor with the pruning shears. With deftness and clarity, Daniel Chamovitz introduces plants' equivalent of our senses, plus floral forms of memory and orientation. When you realise how much plants know, you may think twice before you bite them.’
Hannah Holmes, author of Quirk and Suburban Safari
‘Just as his groundbreaking research uncovered connections between the plant- and animal kingdoms, Daniel Chamovitz's insights in What a Plant Knows transcend the world of plants. This entertaining and educational book is filled with wondrous examples that underscore how the legacy of shared genomes enables plants and animals to respond to their environments. You'll see plants in a new light after reading What a Plant Knows.’
Gloria M. Coruzzi, Carroll and Milton Petrie Professor, Center for Genomics and Systems Biology, New York University
‘If you've ever marveled at how and why plants make the choices they do, What a Plant Knows holds your answer. Chamovitz is a master at translating the science of botany into the language of the layman.’
Michael Malice, author, subject of Ego & Hubris, and succulent enthusiast
‘Plants may be brainless, eyeless and devoid of senses as we know them, but they have a rudimentary 'awareness', says biologist Daniel Chamovitz. In this beautiful reframing of the botanical, he reveals the extent and kind of that awareness through a bumper crop of research.’
Nature
‘For everyone who has wondered at Mimosa, the suddenly snapping Venus flytrap or the way a sunflower's head unerringly turns to follow the sun, Daniel Chamovitz has written the perfect book.’
American Scientist
‘[A] fascinating inside look at what a plant's life is like, and a new lens on our own place in nature.’
Maria Popova, Brain Pickings