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The acclaimed author of Motoring with Mohammed brings us a compelling adventure into the remarkable world of the orchid and the impossibly bizarre array of international characters who dedicte their lives to it.
The orchid is used for everything from medicine for elephants to an aphrodisiac ice cream. A Malaysian species can grow to weigh half a ton while a South American species fires miniature pollen darts at nectar-sucking bees. But the orchid is also the center of an illicit international business: one grower in Santa Barbara tends his plants while toting an Uzi, and a former collector has been in hiding for seven years after serving a jail sentence for smuggling thirty dollars worth of orchids into Britain. Deftly written and captivatingly researched, Orchid Fever is an endlessly enchanting and entertaining tour of an exotic world.
"A wonderful book, I've been up all night reading it, laughing and crying out in horror and clucking at the vivid images of bureaucracy with the bit in its teeth." —Annie Proulx
"An extraordinary, well-told tale of botany, obsession and plant politics. Hansen's vivid descriptions of the complex techniques some orchids use to pollinate themselves will raise your eyebrows at nature's sexual ingenuity." —USA Today
In the same vein as Susan Orlean's Orchid Thief, this captivating tale is not so much about flowers as it is about obsession. In various chapters (some of which have appeared in Natural History magazine), Hansen (Stranger in the Forest; Motoring with Mohammed) examines different facets of the mysterious world of orchids, a universe of incredible subterfuge, erotic plant names and some very eccentric characters. He visits Borneo with two orchid growers and two Penan guides who are extremely puzzled about such enthusiasm over a flower that serves no medicinal or nutritive purpose. Hansen also interviews 84-year-old Eleanor Kerrigan, who in her Seattle basement greenhouse cultivates an illicit orchid collection worth $70,000. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora has a strict policy about certain types of orchids, and many orchid growers and collectors, it turns out, operate on the wrong side of that policy, resulting in an underworld that, as the author notes, resembles the illegal drug trade. Hansen manages to talk to the secretive Henry Azadehdel (a cause c l bre in the orchid world since he was arrested for orchid smuggling in 1987) and travels to Turkey to taste orchid ice cream, which is rumored to be an aphrodisiac. Eventually, he comes to the conclusion that after five years of research he has become as obsessed with his subjects as they are with their flowers ("Orchids were doing strange things to me"). The results are fully enjoyable. (Mar.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
More Reviews and RecommendationsEric Hansen now lives in San Francisco, but over the last twenty-five years he has traveled throughout Europe, the Middle East, Australia, Nepal, and Southeast Asia. His articles and reviews have appeared in The New York Times, Travel and Leisure, Conde Nast Traveler, Outside Magazine, Men's Journal, Natural History Magazine, GEO, and Amica. He is also the author of two highly acclaimed books: Stranger in the Forest and Motoring with Mohammed (available in paperback from Vintage Books). He can be reached at ekhansen@ix.netcom.com.
From the Hardcover edition.
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03/08/2001: I didn't know a thing about orchids before I picked up this book. (probably a bit like Eric Hansen at the very beginning) This book is a witty, well-told story, and if you're just looking for something new to read, this is it. Have you ever seen the movie The Beach? Leo says, 'Everybody's trying to do something different, but they always end up doing the same damn thing.' Eric Hansen is one of those people who is about the closest to doing something different that I've ever seen.
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09/01/2000: I love orchids, but I got bored in the middle of this book and couldn't manage to finish it. The first few chapters were very entertaining, but by the second half of the book, I felt like every chapter was the same. It's not often that I can't finish a book.
Our Review
In an instant, Eric Hansen jumps us into the jungle. "There is something distinctive about the sight and sound of a human body falling from the rain forest canopy," he writes, as immediately we are bogged down beneath heavy trees, our eyes trained on the shifting lights and crackling branches above. Hansen's raw, straightforward prose makes his adventures real to us; through his stories, we can follow him to unimaginable, crazy worlds. In Orchid Fever, his travel journal/thrill ride, Hansen takes us into the freakish world of the orchid police, where clandestine plants bloom into danger and obsession. It's an electrifying read for gardeners and a rocket-jolt for civilians, too.
In Orchid Fever, Hansen tells us stories about the complex, illogical rules that limit orchid collecting. Those rules began in the late 1980s, alongside rules meant to protect endangered animals: CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) reasoned that rare plants and animals should be left in the wild, so as to preserve dying species. It sounds perfectly reasonable -- except that plants don't reproduce as animals do. Hansen explains: "Endangered megafauna (elephants, rhinoceros, whales) might produce only one offspring per year, whereas a single sanderianum seed pod can produce about 8,000 to 10,000 seedlings per year in a commercial nursery, and a mature plant carries five to twenty pods." He adds wryly: "If whales, elephants, and rhinoceros had this sort of reproductive capability, there wouldn't be room on earth to put them and their offspring." The best way to conserve endangered flora, it turns out, is to dig them up and transfer them to nurseries. The CITES rules don't conserve orchids at all.
Despite that fatal flaw, Hansen tells us, the CITES conservation rules have taken on a life of their own. Conservation officials have learned to choke cash from the business of "protecting" orchids, so they'll never stop hounding orchid collectors. Hansen remarks, "In the beginning, I just wanted to find out how beautiful flowers could be responsible for so much vile behavior. It didn't take long to get a taste of what was going on. I soon discovered that many convicted 'smugglers' were the real conservationists and that certain well-positioned 'conservationists' were smuggling plants."
Hansen makes a good case for his perspective, too. At one point, he even relates a phone call from World Wildlife Fund officials, during which the Fund hollers at a nursery owner: "We don't want to talk -- we just want the money and to make an example of you!" Hansen sighs, "Here, at long last, is an honest and straightforward statement that explains what this orchid conservation game is all about." The officials make the rules so that they can extort money from collectors forced to break the rules. It's a shakedown.
But that conservationist shakedown proves fruitful in one respect: It creates a black market for orchids. In this orchid underworld, hoodlums, scientists, and grandmas squabble over contraband blossoms: They meet at seedy roadhouses under assumed names; they congregate at orgiastic orchid conferences; and they snag cuttings on the q.t. In Orchid Fever, we follow the orchid collectors through their reprobate machinations, all the while marveling at the unlikely individuals swept into the intrigue. We meet Henry Azadehdel, a grower who's gone underground since his orchid-related arrest. And we meet Rebecca, an elderly orchidophile who thrills to the more erotic aspects of her garden; she caresses their petals, crooning: "Big, fat, full...and fabulous."
Of course, Rebecca's not the only outlaw to find orchids sexy. During Western orchid shows, for example, flowers are rated for their fat lips and lustrous dorsals. In the East, orchids can also be rated for their perfumes -- that heady, feminine odor specific to each flower. The orchid underworld, Hansen shows us, is obsessed by hothouse flowers, by their bizarre reproductive systems and their naked beauty. Joe Kunisch threw his wife out when she complained about his pollination projects. Other orchid lovers whisper about dusting pollen pouches with tiny implements or even licking petals.
Such behavior might sound sick, but according to Hansen, orchids have always compelled desire. Hansen notes that the orchid, reproductively, is designed for maximum sex appeal: with its dizzying perfumes, an orchid will lure a bee into a disorienting trap of pollen and glue from which the bee emerges only after hours of struggle. People, too, are drawn under the orchid's spell -- but in Hansen's experience, they rarely emerge from it. As Kunisch puts it: "You can get off alcohol, drugs, women, food and cars, but once you're hooked on orchids you're finished. You never get off orchids...never."
In order to understand orchid fever, Hansen leads us through jungles, orchid shows, perfume factories, and gardens. His investigation reveals much about CITES and orchid smuggling, but it reveals much more about the fiercely individualistic orchid lovers. It's their love of distinctive beauty -- an unusual petal or a singular leaf -- that keeps orchid lovers in the collecting biz. And it's a love of unusual characters that keeps Hansen following the orchid shows.
In Orchid Fever, Hansen collects a nursery-full of bizarre personages and out-of-the-way facts -- and with his highly detailed, witty prose, he makes each collector's story real. In the jungle or in a greenhouse, Hansen finds the stories that make orchids absorbing and the people who make orchid mania fun. Orchid Fever is a wild ride through the underbelly of flower conservation, and a must-read for every gardener.
Jesse Gale is not an orchid smuggler.
The acclaimed author of Motoring with Mohammed brings us a compelling adventure into the remarkable world of the orchid and the impossibly bizarre array of international characters who dedicte their lives to it.
The orchid is used for everything from medicine for elephants to an aphrodisiac ice cream. A Malaysian species can grow to weigh half a ton while a South American species fires miniature pollen darts at nectar-sucking bees. But the orchid is also the center of an illicit international business: one grower in Santa Barbara tends his plants while toting an Uzi, and a former collector has been in hiding for seven years after serving a jail sentence for smuggling thirty dollars worth of orchids into Britain. Deftly written and captivatingly researched, Orchid Fever is an endlessly enchanting and entertaining tour of an exotic world.
"A wonderful book, I've been up all night reading it, laughing and crying out in horror and clucking at the vivid images of bureaucracy with the bit in its teeth." —Annie Proulx
"An extraordinary, well-told tale of botany, obsession and plant politics. Hansen's vivid descriptions of the complex techniques some orchids use to pollinate themselves will raise your eyebrows at nature's sexual ingenuity." —USA Today
In the same vein as Susan Orlean's Orchid Thief, this captivating tale is not so much about flowers as it is about obsession. In various chapters (some of which have appeared in Natural History magazine), Hansen (Stranger in the Forest; Motoring with Mohammed) examines different facets of the mysterious world of orchids, a universe of incredible subterfuge, erotic plant names and some very eccentric characters. He visits Borneo with two orchid growers and two Penan guides who are extremely puzzled about such enthusiasm over a flower that serves no medicinal or nutritive purpose. Hansen also interviews 84-year-old Eleanor Kerrigan, who in her Seattle basement greenhouse cultivates an illicit orchid collection worth $70,000. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora has a strict policy about certain types of orchids, and many orchid growers and collectors, it turns out, operate on the wrong side of that policy, resulting in an underworld that, as the author notes, resembles the illegal drug trade. Hansen manages to talk to the secretive Henry Azadehdel (a cause c l bre in the orchid world since he was arrested for orchid smuggling in 1987) and travels to Turkey to taste orchid ice cream, which is rumored to be an aphrodisiac. Eventually, he comes to the conclusion that after five years of research he has become as obsessed with his subjects as they are with their flowers ("Orchids were doing strange things to me"). The results are fully enjoyable. (Mar.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
Travel writer Hansen profiles botanists, plant smugglers, hobbyists, nurserymen, and others whose lives are devoted to orchids. His title is somewhat misleading: although the subjects depicted are all keenly passionate about orchids, only a few are feverishly consumed by their interest. Readers expecting a true tale of orchid mania should turn instead to Susan Orlean's The Orchid Thief (LJ 1/99). Most of Hansen's sketches are fundamentally vehicles for illustrating his serious and provocative argument against CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora). According to the author, CITES thwarts orchid conservation and perversely legitimizes plant smuggling by botanical institutions. This controversial perspective alone makes this title an essential purchase for botanical and horticultural libraries, but it is an optional acquisition for other collections.--Brian Lym, City Coll. Lib. of San Francisco Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\
Orchid Fever provides plant enthusiasts with a treatise on horticultural collecting and travel, examining how horticulturalists work, following the author on his worldwide journeys in search of orchids and plants, and blending botany lore with first-person experiences. Lay readers and natural history readers alike will relish its contents.
Hansen's is a scandalous, amusing, and thoroughly entertaining read.
"A horticultural tale of Love, Lust, and Lunacy" is the apt subtitle of Eric Hansen's fascinating new book, Orchid Fever. From the wilds of Sarawak and the halls of London's Kew Gardens to the high-rise offices of a Japanese cosmetic company and the northern bogs of Minnesota, the adventurous Hansen, author of the classic Motoring With Mohammed and Stranger in the Forest, followed the tangled trail of plant collectors, botanists, and customs officials. He does his best to sort out the good guys from the bad, but even after his seven years of investigating, the world of orchid devotees remains a bit of a mystery. His biggest scoop is an old adage well worth remembering: You can't tell a book by its cover, or know a person from his reputation. Hansen's is a scandalous, amusing, and thoroughly entertaining read.
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