
How to Plant a Billion Trees
A Memoir of Childhood Trauma and the Healing Power of Nature
Nicole Walker(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic USA (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 30. April 2026
Book
Hardback
232 pages
979-8-216-27887-0 (ISBN)
Description
When Nicole Walker was molested and had an abortion at age 11, the distance between her and the world grew until she couldn't imagine a future place for her anywhere. In How to Plant a Billion Trees, Walker tries to understand why her whole life didn't fall apart, as was predicted. As she pieces together her story, she finds that it was thanks in no small part to her mother, her sisters, her friends who did not let the sexual abuse to define her. In this candid portrayal of a young girl, Nicole Walker writes about how, thanks to her family, her friends, and the mountains of the Wasatch, Cascades, and San Francisco Peaks, she reknit herself into the fabric of a supportive culture.
Employing the forest as a model to understand how to reconnect her life with the world, Nicole studies the way that ecosystems anticipate, react, and support each small part of the whole. As she learns more about ecology, she discovers that in a healthy forest, even the gritty, decaying elements contribute to the health of the forest. The process of rebuilding the self into a community parallels the process of a forest's growth. To apply that lesson to the human ecosystem, Nicole realizes that even the hard-to-stomach stories need to be told, and, with air, that grit is transformed into something alive and new.
Employing the forest as a model to understand how to reconnect her life with the world, Nicole studies the way that ecosystems anticipate, react, and support each small part of the whole. As she learns more about ecology, she discovers that in a healthy forest, even the gritty, decaying elements contribute to the health of the forest. The process of rebuilding the self into a community parallels the process of a forest's growth. To apply that lesson to the human ecosystem, Nicole realizes that even the hard-to-stomach stories need to be told, and, with air, that grit is transformed into something alive and new.
Reviews / Votes
Nicole Walker's How to Plant a Billion Trees gives me hope. It has resonance and life, and will always be on my shelf. -- Luis Alberto Urrea * author of Good Night, Irene *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
496 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-216-27887-0 (9798216278870)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Nicole Walker
How to Plant a Billion Trees
A Memoir of Childhood Trauma and the Healing Power of Nature
E-Book
02/2026
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€25.99
Available for download

Nicole Walker
How to Plant a Billion Trees
A Memoir of Childhood Trauma and the Healing Power of Nature
E-Book
02/2026
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Academic
€25.99
Available for download
Person
Nicole Walker is the author of the forthcoming collection. She is the author of Sustainability: A Love Story, Where the Tiny Things Are, Egg, Micrograms, Quench Your Thirst with Salt, and This Noisy Egg. She edited for Bloomsbury the essay collections Science of Story with Sean Prentiss and with Margot Singer, Bending Genre: Essays on Creative Nonfiction. She's nonfiction editor at Diagram and Professor at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.
Content
1. Burn It All Down
2. Heartwood
3. Just Up and Move
4. Dry as Smoke
5. Failure and Succession
6. A Single Tree Is Not a Forest
7. Well-Fertilized Soil
8. Reseeding
9. Vertical Trees, Horizontal Forests
10. Old Growth Forests Aren't Easy
11. Infestations
12. Fires that Burn Too Hot
13. Trees Are Not the Only Fruit
14. On the Trail
Glossary
Notes
About the Author
2. Heartwood
3. Just Up and Move
4. Dry as Smoke
5. Failure and Succession
6. A Single Tree Is Not a Forest
7. Well-Fertilized Soil
8. Reseeding
9. Vertical Trees, Horizontal Forests
10. Old Growth Forests Aren't Easy
11. Infestations
12. Fires that Burn Too Hot
13. Trees Are Not the Only Fruit
14. On the Trail
Glossary
Notes
About the Author