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Concrete Botany: The Ecology of Plants in the Age of Human Disturbance

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Concrete Botany is a gritty, kick-in-the-guts look at the ecological disturbance humans have caused and the resilience of the plants living amongst it.

Delivered in his raw and unapologetic yet botanically accurate tone, Joey Santore—the unforgettable host of Crime Pays but Botany Doesn’t—offers an often unsettling view of human-caused ecological destruction and its impact on the natural ecosystems our very lives depend on.

The choices of modern civilization have led to a f***ed-up planet, scraped bare and covered in concrete and invasive species. We’ve wiped out entire ecosystems, moved invasive plants to new continents where they don’t belong, and, in a few hundred years, we’ve managed to muck up the intricate balance of a planet that has been evolving for eons. The consequences of our actions are now at our doorstep, ready to strike a match.

But not all is lost. In this groundbreaking examination of plants and their role in the Anthropocene (the age of human disturbance), we see light through the cracks in the concrete and learn that humanity’s course correction starts with an understanding of plant ecology. With this knowledge comes the realization that the lives of humans and plants are interconnected in ways humans cannot live without. Plants are the base of every terrestrial ecosystem on the planet, and their presence can heal the damage humanity has caused. Our willingness to restore native plant communities and the biodiversity they support (starting in our immediate surroundings) is an essential first step in the right direction. 

While returning every abandoned brownfield and old rail corridor into a native plant–filled, fully restored ecosystem may be out of reach for the average citizen, fostering the native ecology and biodiversity of our own backyards is not. Concrete Botany is ultimately about how the choices we make as individuals can help ensure humanity’s survival on a very disturbed and rapidly changing planet.

226 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 7, 2026

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Joey Santore

3 books18 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews
Profile Image for Paul.
4 reviews
April 6, 2026
I have been a big fan of Joey ever since discovering his YouTube channel several years ago. His no nonsense style was as refreshing then as it is now in Concrete Botany. Joey is right, our society has constructed itself to only value contrived intangible goals. This has cascaded to deprive most people of a connection to the land they live on and the ecosystem we are all a part of, which then leads to a whole host of other issues.

The book is about his journey with this topic of native plants and the "real world" that we all exist in. It's moderate on narrative, but I found it relaxing and enjoyable.

My one criticism is that sometimes he can belabor the point he is trying to make. But that may be more of an issue for me as I've already heard a lot of what he said in the book through his podcast and videos. If you're familiar with his work you may not find a lot of new information. But this is good as a manifesto for how the world is botanically screwed up and some methods to fix it. All in all, I recommend.
2 reviews
April 8, 2026
amazing book. a really good blend of interesting information and fun stories. if your even remotely interested in the natural world this a definite read
Profile Image for Shae.
50 reviews
May 30, 2026
I wish every oogle grew up to be Joey Santore. He’s Bukowski if Chuck had just let the bluebird out. And if the bluebird got really, really, really interested in botany.

Colorful language and neck tattoos and train hopping youth aside (or maybe very much central), this book and his YouTube channel are delightful glimpses into an excellent brain that’s retuned itself to the living world to an amazing degree. He’s brilliant, he makes me ugly-laugh, and his devotion to continually cultivating his impressive ecological knowledge is obvious and touchingly humble. As someone who’s admonished no small number of people to “cultivate a sense of fucking wonder” over the years, discovering some outwardly grouchy guy from Chicago who apparently spends his time exclaiming gleefully about, say, a cool cactus in a gas station parking lot or a neat beetle pollinating a rare native flower, was pretty life-affirming.

And really, the misanthropic jokes are a misdirect, and a thin one at that. It takes very little time to feel how deeply sensitive, compassionate, and above all hopeful his worldview is. He’s a crusty little idealist and honestly it warms my heart. Lines like “The lack of a connection to the land a person lives on has *got* to fuck a person up. It’s an unreasonably cruel thing to deprive someone of that…,” and “Always be kind and don't talk down to or lecture people, but be persistent as hell.” speak to his considerable empathy for people.

All of that to say, read the book. And watch some of his videos (you’ll “hear” the book as you read after a video or two, guaranteed). If you already care about native plants and ecosystems and habitat restoration, you’ll feel like you’re hanging out with a comrade. If you don’t, let his enthusiasm sway you into curiosity.
Profile Image for laurel [the suspected bibliophile].
2,134 reviews793 followers
Did Not Finish
May 24, 2026
Didn't even make it through the introduction.

I should have known it was gonna be...weird (like, weird in a trying too hard way?) by the over-emphasis on "gritty" and "kick in the guts" in the blurb.

Not for me at all.
Profile Image for Stella.
1,102 reviews19 followers
June 12, 2026
A unique perspective on native plants. Occasionally quite vulgar and cynical about humanity, but with hope grounded in the restorative power of those plants. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Wilson.
299 reviews9 followers
May 17, 2026
My wife surprised me with this book after I got into Joey (Tony?) Santore's YouTube channel, Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, like many others spellbound by the sight of a working-class Chicago Italian identifying random plants to Latin species while ranting against the short-sighted, consumption-obsessed, suburb-trapped anti-ethos of American modernity. This book is basically his videos put into physical form—equal parts intro to plant ecology and anti-lawn diatribe. I'm not a botanist, but as a PhD biologist I still know more about plants than the average person, so most of the scientific material I already knew, aside from the specifics about certain plant species. For me, the clear-sighted and occasionally profane waxing of Santore's philosophy was the highlight. It's not so much about "killing your lawn"—which is only the most immediate material consequence of his ethos—but about our society's disconnection from nature and the immeasurable harm it's done not only to our world, but to ourselves. It's kind of pathetic, but as much as I agree with these perspectives, many of them are new to me, or at least not verbalized so clearly. We live in a world where it's much easier for a child to name 10 water bottle brands than to name 10 native plants. We tend to think of nature-obsessed folk as weirdos, tree-huggers... But water bottles have only existed for what—0.001% of human history? And humans ourselves have only existed for 0.001% of Earth's history. Our current societally anti-ecological mindset is what is aberrant. Santore's call for humility, respect, and interaction with what he calls "the living world" really resonated with me, and hopefully will with many others.
176 reviews1 follower
June 6, 2026
I didn't love the narration style. The opening being a dramatic "I cuss sometimes" warning combined with the frequent complaining about random trappings of modern society did not read well to me. Instead of relatable or righteous or whatever it just kind of read as like grumpy. The energy of someone I would avoid at work for not having anything nice to say ever.
It never really grew on me but the botany and information was interesting enough to mostly be worth putting up with the "I don't like ads or malls or people grumble grumble." I liked how practical this was, it was very based in personal experience and it gave good advice for like actual stuff people could be doing.
Profile Image for Dillan.
57 reviews1 follower
April 25, 2026
my first audiobook! liked this a lot - its very relatable and humorous and god do i agree with everything he said. i too think society is stupid and plants are neat. not quite there with bugs, tho.
Profile Image for Anna Nesterovich.
636 reviews39 followers
May 1, 2026
I can't say I learned much from this book, but that's an expected occupational hazard for me. I'm giving it 4 stars regardless, because if this book helps to inspire even one person to make a difference and plant a native, it's worth it.
Profile Image for Sally.
326 reviews6 followers
April 12, 2026
Part auto-biography part science book, this is the descent of one man's obsession into plants. It starts with something small, like seeing a weird plant growing where there shouldn't be anything growing, wondering what it is. Looking it up, learning why it might be able to survive. Before you know it you're obsessed.

This is a great starting point for anyone looking to educate themselves on nature. If you think “damn, I need to go touch grass” then this book explains why that is and how important it is to connect with plants.
It's full of information about what is happening to the world around us and why plants are the answer.

As a bit of a plant nerd I was so excited to read this, I just want more people to love plants as much as I do.
If you're okay with eco-activism and cursing please read this.
Thank you to NetGalley and Cool Springs Press for providing this ARC in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Sarah Willis.
29 reviews
April 9, 2026
This is a unique and fantastic take on botany and ecology. Passionate and profanity laced, his enthusiasm for natives and habitat restoration is infectious. Becoming a native guerrilla gardener is almost an imperative after reading this book and he gives you the beginning tools to kill your lawn and start your own native habitat restoration. I just wish there were more pictures in this book. I particularly would have liked to see before and after pics of his habitat restoration projects.
Profile Image for Haley Huseby.
92 reviews4 followers
April 13, 2026
“What does it mean to exhibit gratitude and respect for plant life? The best indicator of respect for anything including people is an innate curiosity and willingness to learn about it, pay attention to it and study it. People aren’t curious about a thing unless they’re attracted to it. Innate curiosity does wonders, as does the excitement when the brain makes the connection between two disparate subjects.”

Until I came across this book I was completely unfamiliar with Joey Santore, but it took me all of ten minutes in to follow him on Instagram for more. Santore is a self-taught botanist who narrates his plant stories and knowledge in such a way that feels like the perfect combination of smart assy and matter of fact without any notes of arrogance. It’s like I’m sitting at a local bar having a few beers with an uncle but instead of complaining about the work week we’re excited about plants the same way people get excited about animals. (Plants also have disguises that protect them from predators just like animals!) The underlying topic of conversation being “Why don’t we care? What if we DID care? Here’s why you SHOULD care!” in regards to the ecological ignorance most of us have.

I decided to listen to the audiobook and I’m so glad I did, because the author also narrates his audiobook and I didn’t feel like I had to try really hard to understand the matters he was discussing. Even with all of the scientific terms for plants he used, it rolled out of his mouth so easily that it made me feel like I could dive into botany myself and memorize those terms one day, and he has the sort of accent where he doesn’t sound pretentious but he does want you to care. What I really loved about this book was that it was just NEAT. Super rad. Fun to listen to. The way we grow up learning about animals and bugs and why each of them serve a specific purpose in their native areas, this is how the author speaks about flora. I had never really considered that while animals evolve over time and have different species, plants are the same and their paths are endless. I sat and looked at my yard in a new perspective. Humans have cleared out entire ecosystems to put up homes and businesses that eventually end up abandoned and have dug up and moved plants to other areas where they shouldn’t be, causing extreme consequences for plant life world wide. The way he explains down to detail how the simplest of weeds and flowers we see on a daily basis may or may not beneficial to where it’s now growing and why that is, and how we as a human race are responsible for essentially fucking up the natural order of plant development BUT how we as a human race can learn, grow and right the wrongs to save our environment. How upon the settlement of this land, the east coast suffered greater than most regions of the US and how the children and grandchildren to come will never know the plant life that our ancestors did in those areas simply due to settlement and development of lands. There’s so much history in the plants we look over and walk over and pave over every day and if we care enough to take it upon ourselves to take an interest in it, we can learn about it just like him and make conscious efforts to look at our lands as a gift versus something that is owed to us. We can look to flora for education and answers and care for it the way it was made to care for us.

“Every plant possesses clues that allude to their evolutionary and ecological history though they might be more subtle.”

Not only that, but the incredible amount of species of plants we’re missing out on learning about simply because research for the benefits of capitalism and consumerism have pushed for answers that land money in the pockets of leaders and billionaires versus having research done just because our earth deserves that, and that should be enough.

“Don’t get me wrong, I love people as individuals. In large groups when we know other people are watching us, we become predictable, conformist, performative and too easily persuaded….We’re the only species of animal that thinks it’s not an animal. We believe we have free will and choice yet the vast majority of us remain entirely unaware of how narrow our world views are, and unaware of the factors that shape them.”

I didn’t feel like I was hearing another lesson of reduce/reuse/recycle. Between interesting and unique facts and personal stories about his adventures and studies in various regions across the world, this was really, really cool and I’d absolutely recommend it to anyone even if you’re not a beginner gardener like me or someone who just loves learning about our earth. Everyone could benefit from reading this book!! I’d like to think I’m not completely unaware about the subject matter, but this opened some brain doors for me. I’ll definitely be adding more books like this to my list and tuning into his YouTube channel!

Profile Image for Jennifer.
3,434 reviews68 followers
June 8, 2026
This was fine, but most likely not the book that I would recommend to someone who was interested in learning more about plants, and how humans *are* part of nature, unless said person was a cishet white man who gets most of his information from podcasts and YouTube videos of loud men asserting things. I say this only somewhat meanly. I do think that the author's YouTube series would be a better, and more comprehensive fit, for the type of person for whom this book is an entry point.

While I'm already grumbling, I found reading this to be jarring, because the author speaks directly to the audience and uses or implies "we" think/feel/have experienced/should do things, except that I don't feel like I'm included in the assumed "we" of the target audience. In my opinion, the main thing going for this book is that "America" likes the idea of clever, blunt (including swearing) blue-collar manly men who are "men of action" and stick it to the overeducated elitists (brags that 6 out of 10 PhD students can't stand him). On one hand, this is fine, because not all books are for everyone, and it is good that books and authors can reach different subsets of people, especially if it is going to galvanize them to think more deeply about nature, and healing it/ourselves. On the other hand, I find it extremely obnoxious, because people should theoretically be able to hear, absorb, and learn similar messages from a book like *Braiding Sweetgrass* except that colonialism, white supremacy, and sexism create mental and emotional barriers to understanding. There are also about three sentences about indigenous knowledge in the book, which seems a bit slim 🤷‍♂️ It also really annoyed me that the author doesn't acknowledge that breaking into private property, even if it's industrial wasteland could go very badly (incarceration, death) for, I don't know, pretty much anyone with demographics and social presentation different than his, glibly saying that if that is too high risk that you can kill your lawn or collaborate with restoration organizations (true, but said in a way implying that those people are risk-averse suckers).

The good things:

-Language that is understandable by non-experts that is accurate but not condescending, including defining terms when necessary

-Succintly stating that being in the environment, thinking about plants, taking action to make the planet better in some small way, makes him feel better, because humans are meant to live in/with/be part of nature. I think the way he talks about this could get through to people who might find similar ideas offputting because they're too "woowoo" or academic.

-Describing some actions everyone can take right now (looking up and lesrning about their local plants, killing their lawn in favor of a natural garden, checking out certain resources)
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,867 reviews108 followers
June 15, 2026
I received this book from Quarto books and Cool Springs Press on May 14th. Getting this in under the wire!

It's really tough to get into this book. In the intro especially and on into the first chapter, the author comes across as *extremely* conceited. Comparing himself directly to Charles Darwin (p. 20) makes it clear how highly he thinks of himself. This isn't out of character for the rest of the writing, sadly.

The narration is incredibly repetitive, exploring the author's curiosity and botanical awakening. It distracts from and delays getting to the actual content of the book. The tone is heavy-handed lecturing and quickly becomes tiring. The most basic concepts are presented as groundbreaking realizations that are special or unique to the author (ex: "I was starting to piece together that every plant was a product of the region it came from, the region it evolved in" (p.26)). Overuse of quotation marks muddle the writing-- some are used correctly or reasonably, to denote a term that is about to be defined or redefined. More often, however, they appear around a concept of metaphor-- completely unnecessarily and demonstrating a lack of familiarity and/or comfort with conventions or with writing in general.

Despite the author's assertions (p. 23-34), other books on ecology do exist and are less of a slog. Try, for example, The Ecology Book: Big Ideas Simply Explained for a start.

The illustrations are ok, but it seems weird to have only black and white line drawings in a book about plants.
Profile Image for TheAccidental  Reader.
207 reviews24 followers
June 27, 2026
Fascinating and inspiring. I need to start some seeds. A couple of the chapters get very repetitive, but the rest is good reading. One of the books in the bibliography or further reading list is How the Earth Turned Green, so that's my next read.

Everyone's reading Tallamy, and I have done so too, but I need more knowledge to share, because everyone I know is getting interested in native plants these days and I am getting tired of my one trick, which is to make sure people know that baby birds cannot live to adulthood if mama bird can't find any insects in our supposedly beautiful, but completely sterile and lifeless yards which provide no leaves caterpillars are able to eat.

I wanted a more fleshed out experience. Sara Stein's Noah's Garden set me on this path and Concrete Botany is an entirely different take. I very much appreciate all these books.
Profile Image for John.
1,211 reviews39 followers
May 25, 2026
Felt less about plants and more about the author, who I found annoying. But can’t deny the substance and intention. I think for my tastes I’d prefer something more dryly scientific than plant bro.
Profile Image for Amy Fleming.
81 reviews
June 15, 2026
This is great if you are just learning about the natural world. Joey Santore is the naturalist of our age, but the book feels repetitive. I definitely did not need him to explain why it's better to have local native plants instead of landscaping, parking garages, and data centers. If you're interested in the subject, you should just go to his YouTube page.
Profile Image for Tim Martin.
905 reviews57 followers
April 27, 2026
Lively, passionate, and informative book on urban and suburban wild plants, their ecology, and the positive and negative roles human play by Joey Santore, the host of the YouTube channel Crime Pays but Botany Doesn’t. An extremely knowledgeable self-taught botanist, the author discussed how his job working for the railroad as a switchman, brakeman, conductor, and engineer in California, Oregon, and Nevada led him to studying the plants of waste places in industrial, retail, and suburban areas, hating and appreciating invasives that so often dominant such places, and learning what can be done to return native plants to even the worst places in cities.

Chapter one was the author’s journey in learning botany, ecology, evolution, biogeography, and taxonomy, describing how he came to study the plants in the industrial wastelands where he worked, appreciating how each area he went to had its own flora. He discussed not only plant blindness but how culture instills a hatred for “messy” or “vermin-filled” wild plants and areas of natural growth, how plants need to have value to be of interest at least according to society, and how learning the local plant can species can make the environment more interesting for the average person.

Chapter two discussed how plants are part of a living system in an area along with insects, fungi, and other organisms, how the local flora reflects local soil conditions and type, elevation, and climate, how plants carry the traits associated with such environments such as spines or hairs in plants originating in deserts, natural dispersal invents versus invasive events of non-local plants, disjunction in plant ranges either from range fragmentation or reflecting the results of natural dispersal events, how invasive a plant is a function of temporal and geographic separation (the more separation, the more invasive; also the more similar local conditions are to conditions where it evolved, the more invasive), how not all non-native plants are invasive but all invasive plants are non-native, how native plants can be aggressive but never invasive, discussed the concept of shifting baselines as far as people understanding local flora, and gave examples of the author’s journey with plants including illegally planting rare California cypresses in a median in California and how invasive European Buckthorn in the Chicago area meant for years the author never knew spring ephemerals existed.

Chapter three discussed the concept of the weed, how urban plant ecology is a “Frankenstein ecology” of invasives from all over the world and some native species, how successful invasive species that grow in “anthropic landscapes” and “concrete hellscapes” like powerline easements and in chain link fences are pioneer species, highly tolerant of stress, disruption, fast growing, produce many seeds, have efficient seed dispersal, don’t need insect pollinators, and are able to quickly develop as a population resistance to herbicides. In addition, some plants like Tree of Heaven and Garlic Mustard produce natural herbicides that cuts down on plant competition. The chapter closes with a tour of the botany of urban wastelands along the Los Angeles River, as seen from a deflating dingy In Queens, New York City, in Mexico, and along the Chicago River, profiling a number of plants like Giant Reed, Russian Thistle, and Fennel.

Chapter four discussed why the author preferred the term the living world or the real world over nature (nature as a term he thought separated man when man is always part of the living world), discussed why you would want to kill your lawn and how to do this, discussed the practical, pragmatic reasons to use native plants such as drought tolerance, flood tolerance, pest tolerance, little to no maintenance, helping local wildlife, combating urban heat islands, and psychological benefits, ways to get involved in restoring local plants if you can’t kill your lawn or don’t have a lawn, and while careful not to praise invasives, does discuss how they are better than nothing and can prepare the way for natives to be restored by such elements as building up soil, humidity, and creating habitat.
Profile Image for Rike.
2 reviews3 followers
April 24, 2026
“We have a responsibility to the land we live on, to nurture and support it, not just plant what we find whimsically attractive, using the most chickenshit and stereotypical metric of taste. These filler plants of modern ecologically blind horticulture are the live laugh love sign of the modern American landscape - uninspiring, culturally irrelevant, and overused to the point of becoming meaningless. Most importantly, they are useless to the other elements of the living world here. Conversely, the plants I see when I am out in the living world, studying ecosystems, represent freedom. They are a product of the places where they evolved and all the living and non-living elements of natural selection there. They were forged by the land itself.”

I really enjoyed learning about Joey’s path towards botany. This book deals with humanity’s relationship with the living world, especially plants. We have mostly banished native plants from our human made areas. And yet some still manage to thrive in the “anthropic landscape”, in abandoned lots and near railroad lines. These ruderal plants have adaptations, which help them survive harsh conditions. I have always enjoyed botanizing in the city, but I have never really given much thought to what sets the plants I find there apart from those in more intact ecosystem. I am hopeful, that books like this will encourage more people to respect and appreciate the plants around us and to support biodiversity in urban centers by planting native plants.
14 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 10, 2026
First I want to thank Joey Santore, Cool Springs Press and NetGalley for the opportunity to review this book before its release to the general public.

Concrete Botany is a sobering read into the far-reaching consequences of humanity's wholesale destruction of our natural habitat. Joey simultaneously provides a thorough education into the subject of botany, whilst not being afraid to exact pointed criticism, something that is uncommon in educational books and is refreshing to see here.

Far too often educational media timidly avoids getting political or holding a strong stance on contemporary issues. This book is an example of the opposite, and I mean that as a compliment.

Joey is a self-taught botanist who got into the field perhaps a little later than some do, but is not a layman by any means, and has clearly invested a great deal of time and effort into refining his knowledge, and is subsequently well respected within his field.

A considerable amount of information is presented in this book, and in a way that never feels dry or clinical. With each concept introduced he gives real-world examples of how that knowledge can be applied in practice to our daily lives.
Profile Image for V.
901 reviews5 followers
June 9, 2026
So here's the conundrum: Joey Santore's videos are probably most popular with folks who, like myself, already have a fair amount of knowledge about botany and ecology/biogeography. For such people, much of the information in the book (especially the first half) is old hat. I often zoned out through explanations of concepts with which I already was familiar. Due to my prior knowledge and my periodic inattention, I am unable to evaluate whether or not the author explains things in a way that would be easy for a novice botanist to absorb.

Santore's more personal anecdotes, however, may seem hella interesting for those of us who learned botany in a more ivory-tower setting than Santore.

The book's voice (to be clear, its figurative voice--I ingested the paper version, not the audiobook) comes off as a lot more earnest than that of the character Santore assumes for his videos. Good, because the hoodlum from Chicago would become tiresome over the period of a full-length book. But a bit of an unnerving code-switch, nonetheless.

And it wasn't terrible, but the book could have used a final round of copy editing, preferably by a person with a moderate knowledge of biology.
Profile Image for Deepak Dhapade.
9 reviews
Read
March 9, 2026
I have read this book recently. I like its title "Concrete Botany". This book is written by Joey Santore. This book is related to science. It has a large amount of description of many species of plants. It is a very useful book to know about the life cycle of plants. It has found information about the evolution of plants. It has a lot of knowledge about geography, culture and nature etc. It explains the behavior of human beings to the other living beings. This book describes how nature make the rules for everyone but human always break them. They also create a horrific circumstances for every one. They also destroy the Ecosystem of Earth. This book gives an ides how we can make pure environment in our planet with the help of plants and trees. This book could have been extraordinary if it had been more diagrams.
Profile Image for Katrina McCollough.
508 reviews46 followers
June 25, 2026
I've been watching Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't for a while (~2019 ish) and it started a slow introduction to botany, starting with my 'bus stop botany' classes which were in large part inspired by Joey's tours through Oakland. I love this book for highlighting the invasives and ruderals (new word for me, very cool) in a new light, as the pioneers in our human-made ecosystems. The last chapter was like a love letter to the real world and a plea to all the sane people to just kill your fucking lawns, loved it. I am a little sad the book didn't end with a 'alright go fuck yourselves, bye', but kudos to Joey for being this badass self-taught botanist that's bringing the real world to a bunch of people who are tired of academic-style videos and lessons and want a new take on how to appreciate the world around them without sounding like an out of touch scientist.
Profile Image for Rachel Smith.
254 reviews
May 1, 2026
I have followed Joey's work for some time, and enjoy the online content quite a bit. I was excited to support his new book! The first two chapters were a bit weak in my opinion but I really got into the later sections.I learned some new things about plants and got an insight into an overall philosophy for dealing with the devastation we have caused to the living world. I found myself inspired by several ideas and appreciated some new mindsets around invasion philosophy. Highly recommended for those who appreciate his style and are interested in some more broad strokes understanding of plant evolution in disturbed landscapes. This isn't an in-depth plant ID or ecology book which I think might be what fans would expect.
Profile Image for ruvzo.
73 reviews
May 13, 2026
I happened to be reading this book alongside studying ecology, great coincidence.

I found this book to be very informative and enriching, helping me understand a lot more about the greenery surrounding us. I wasn't aware that there was more than meets the eye when it comes to invasive species.

I had some issues getting immersed at times, I find the author's way of writing and my preference in reading to not be so in tune. Hence,it is more a matter of preferences than problems with the contents of the book.

Overall, if I had lawn..., or better yet, let me go kill my imaginary lawn.

Thank you to Net Galley, Quarto Books and Joey Santore for giving me the opportunity to receive a free copy to review.
1 review
May 17, 2026
Great read. A lot of rants, as to be expected from Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't. Mostly in the beginning, referring to societies plant blindness and anthropocentric nature. To someone who is accustomed to seeing through this lens everyday it can feel a little redundant but I can appreciate that it is a great intro to someone who is not informed.

The rest of the book points to some great botanical concepts and anecdotes to dig into, even for an intermediate plant enthusiast. This is not a textbook, but Joey points towards complex ideas with a skillful clarity. I'm looking forward to more work from him.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
637 reviews
June 2, 2026
Very interesting and educational read. It opened my eyes to the resilience of plants and the important role native species play in our ecosystems, even in places heavily shaped by human activity.

I came away with a greater appreciation for the plants growing all around us and a stronger belief that more people should invest in native plants for their yards. They're not only beautiful but also support local wildlife and help create healthier ecosystems. An engaging and informative book that makes you look at the natural world a little differently.
Profile Image for Rey Rodriguez.
9 reviews
April 24, 2026
There’s a lot of food for thought in this book when it comes to the way Crime Pays But Botany Doesn’t views the relationship of plants and the world of humans.

It definitely reads like a journal and collection of essays to me. I really like this as a companion text to his more popular work of YouTube videos and instagram posts.

The illustrations are beautiful and I look forward to his next written project if he decides to undertake one.
11 reviews
May 4, 2026
I listened to the audio book which the author narrates himself. It was fun to hear his love for plants and some of the unique things he has done (gorilla planting). Chapter 1 was a bit of a slog and felt like a lot of his rants could have been cut out. As others have mentioned things can be slightly repetitive but I took that as the author teaching how he learned (self taught) which likely involved seeing things over and over before he got it.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 42 reviews