The Lost Orchid
A Story of Victorian Plunder and Obsession
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- $29.99
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- $29.99
Publisher Description
A New Yorker Best Book of the Year
An Economist Best Book of the Year
The forgotten story of a decades-long international quest for a rare and coveted orchid, chronicling the botanists, plant hunters, and collectors who relentlessly pursued it at great human and environmental cost.
In 1818, a curious root arrived in a small English village, tucked—seemingly by accident—in a packing case mailed from Brazil. The amateur botanist who cultivated it soon realized that he had something remarkable on his hands: an exceptionally rare orchid never before seen on British shores. It arrived just as “orchid mania” was sweeping across Europe and North America, driving a vast plant trade that catered to wealthy private patrons as well as the fast-growing middle classes eager to display exotic flowers at home. Dubbed Cattleya labiata, the striking purple-and-crimson bloom quickly became one of the most coveted flowers on both continents.
As tales of the flower’s beauty spread through scientific journals and the popular press, orchid dealers and enthusiasts initiated a massive search to recover it in its natural habitat. Sarah Bilston illuminates the story of this international quest, introducing the collectors and nurserymen who funded expeditions, the working-class plant hunters who set out to find the flower, the South American laborers and specialists with whom they contracted, the botanists who used the latest science to study orchids in all their varieties, and the writers and artists who established the near-mythic status of the “lost orchid.” The dark side of this global frenzy was the social and environmental harm it wrought, damaging fragile ecologies on which both humans and plants depended.
Following the human ambitions and dramas that drove an international obsession, The Lost Orchid is a story of consumer desire, scientific curiosity, and the devastating power of colonial overreach.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
English literature scholar Bilston (The Promise of the Suburbs) unspools a sprawling saga of greed, triumph, and evolution, all swirling around the hunt for an elusive orchid. British naturalist William Swainson arrived in Brazil in 1816 "animated by a passionate, chaotic, destructive urge to discover." In financial straits and short on social skills, Swainson saw this venture as a chance to make a name for himself. Among the specimens he sent back to Britain was the Cattleya labiata, a lustrous purple and crimson bloom—considered "the epitome of floral beauty"—that launched a wave of "orchidomania." A disruptive, brutal cadre of orchid hunters descended on South America, many of them "socially peripheral figures"—"rootless, working-class, ill-educated"—who would lie, steal, or do anything else it took to find specimens. Orchid retailers, meanwhile, created a rosy alternate reality in their marketing campaigns, drawing on tropes from contemporary adventure stories by authors like Rudyard Kipling to depict orchid hunters as heroes. Even as hybridization and advances in greenhouse technology meant orchid-growing was possible for British gardeners, the search for the Cattleya labiata continued. Bilston scours myriad firsthand sources to construct an edifying story of imperialism, the rise of the natural sciences (including Darwin's fascination with orchids), and some genuine tales of adventure and derring-do. Readers will be engrossed.