A really beautifully-written reflection on history, femininity, connection to nature, and the way in which we mythologize ourselves and the past. Lyons combines travelogue, historical prose, and personal analysis to tell the story of her own journey and that of a dozen Irish women who came before her. Along the way, she provides historically-rich commentary on sexism, climate change, Irish struggles, and modern life. Lyons is self-critical of the way that she, and history in general, craft certain, reductive, narratives about the women of the past. It adds depth and humility to her work. Her prose in incredibly raw, intimate, and touching. The entire book is rich with vivid descriptions of the Irish landscape that flow off of the page. I wanted, like Lyons, to know more about each of the women she walks with.
"As I drift off to sleep, deep in the forest, it occurs to me that my search for Ellen Hutchin's life has mirrored her personality, her experience easily missed to all but the curious - just like the quiet non-flowering seaweeds, mosses, liverworts and lichens she collected. She has opened up a new world for me - of the huge variety of species here on the coasts of West Cork that I begin to see as she once did: studded with the treasures of nature. I admire her greatly - not only for her huge contributions to our scientific understandings of this coastline, but also for finding a way, through her love for botany, to freedom from her day-to-day oppressions."