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Proulx's book follows the lives of two illiterate French woodcutters and their descendants, jumping through time and hopscotching the globe in a series of ten novellas placed back to back.
Proulx's book follows the lives of two illiterate French woodcutters and their descendants, jumping through time and hopscotching the globe in a series of ten novellas placed back to back. (Brian Cronin)

Annie Proulx’s New Eco-Masterpiece Might Be Her Best Book Yet

Proulx鈥檚 chronicle of two families who inhabit and ravage North American forests might be her best book yet

Published: 
Proulx's book follows the lives of two illiterate French woodcutters and their descendants, jumping through time and hopscotching the globe in a series of ten novellas placed back to back.
(Photo: Brian Cronin)

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The first woodcutters you meet in Annie Proulx鈥檚 magnificent new novel about deforestation, ($32, Scribner), are a couple of illiterate Frenchmen who arrive in Canada (then called New France) in the late 1600s. Ren茅 Sel and Charles Duquet work side by side as indentured servants, sleeping in a windowless cowshed and chopping down trees amid the 鈥渕ind-numbing abundance of virgin resources.鈥 Then they hurry off to their fates: Sel to marry a First Nations healer of great wisdom, Duquet to found an ambition-choked timber empire that will last for generations.聽

Barkskins (, Scribner).

The novel follows their progeny across time, hopscotching from Maine to 18th-century Guangzhou, from New Brunswick to New Zealand, from pre鈥揅ivil War Chicago to contemporary Nova Scotia. Along the way, Proulx gives voice to 鈥渂arkskins鈥 (or woodsmen) of every stripe: including a good-natured gay Mi鈥檏maw river driver and a brilliant but rapacious lumber empress more interested聽in board feet than in her newborn son.

It鈥檚 the sort of epic that has extensive family trees printed in the back. But here鈥檚 the surprise: for a 736-page multigenerational doorstop about resource extraction, Barkskins flies. Though I鈥檝e never met Proulx, I share a publisher and editor with her, and I鈥檝e bought and read every book she鈥檚 written. Barkskins might be my favorite. It possesses the dark humor of her Newfoundland鈥搒et bestseller , the social awareness of and her other Wyoming stories, and the meticulous historical detailing of and , which send characters traipsing across the North American continent.

Barkskins consists of ten novellas placed back to back; each scurries through a lifespan or two, then hurtles forward, allowing Proulx to maintain pace while dispatching characters with her usual zest: they are scalped, sewn shut with their own leg tendons, burned to death, frozen to death, and even eaten.

聽One of the chief pleasures of Proulx鈥檚 prose is that it conveys you to so many vanished wildwoods, where you get to聽stand 鈥渢iny and amazed in the kingdom of the pines.鈥澛

Her true protagonists, though, are not the Sels and the Duquets but the earth鈥檚 stupendous precolonial forests: the white pines of New England that grew so thick that their pollen rained on ships at sea, the seemingly limitless pineries of Michigan, the legendary coniferous kauri of New Zealand, 鈥減ale grey columns as wide as European houses.鈥 One of the chief pleasures of Proulx鈥檚 prose is that it conveys you to so many vanished wildwoods, where you get to聽stand 鈥渢iny and amazed in the kingdom of the pines.鈥澛

This is also the great sadness of Barkskins.聽The propulsive tension here is generated not by wondering what will happen to each character, but by knowing that the forests will be leveled one after another. With each page my grief became more acute. As one old forester says late in the novel, 鈥淭hey all go down when men come.鈥

Ecologists sometimes talk about shifting-baseline syndrome鈥攖he idea that the natural world we experience as children programs us for how an unspoiled world should look, even if we鈥檙e seeing only a shadow of the biodiversity our ancestors knew. Nothing I鈥檝e experienced has illustrated this syndrome so profoundly as Barkskins. When Sel and Duquet first arrive in Canada, their feudal seigneur tells them, 鈥淚t is the forest of the world. It is infinite. It twists聽around as a snake swallows its own tail and has no end and no beginning. No one has ever seen its farthest dimension.鈥澛

Seven hundred pages and three hundred years later, a Sel descendant tells two students, 鈥淭he deep forests are gone and now the climate shifts. Can you figure out for yourselves that the old medicine plants grew in a different world?鈥澛

Can novels do more than instruct and聽entertain? Can they compel readers to create real change in the world? I pray they can. On a warming planet where we lose around eight million acres of forest each year鈥攁bout聽12 football fields per minute鈥攗nderstanding how we got here has never been more important. If Barkskins doesn鈥檛 bear exquisite witness to our species鈥檚 insatiable appetite for consumption, nothing can.

From 国产吃瓜黑料 Magazine, June 2016 Lead Photo: Brian Cronin

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