A gripping, Technicolor account
Guardian
Over the years, <i>Rafflesia</i> has bewitched botanists – its very elusiveness adding to its mystique. For Thorogood, who already specialised in parasitic plants, it became the apex of them all. He was Captain Ahab; this was his own great white
- Tom Whipple, The Times
<i>Rafflesia</i> [is] one of the strangest and most gruesome plants on the planet … In his flamboyant account, Thorogood has produced a book as highly coloured as the plant itself
- Kate Teltscher, Spectator
A love letter to the largest flowers in the world: the monstrous blooms of <i>Rafflesia</i> … a relationship that echoes the monomania of any Werner Herzog antihero … like its subject, his prose is undemure, supersized, unbound by convention
- Rachel Aspden, Guardian
A vivid account of this gruelling expedition, combined with his fierce determination to find the pungent plants that have obsessed him for decades
Daily Mail
Thorogood’s dazzling descriptions light up the faraway forests with an impassioned commitment
- Sophy Roberts, TLS
Chris Thorogood is a self-described ‘plant junkie’. The plant on which he is hooked is a bizarre one called <i>Rafflesia</i>, a parasitic monster found growing only in the Philippines and Indonesia and notable for its enormous, fleshy blossom. <i>Pathless Forests</i> is a sort of travelogue describing Thorogood’s journey around this part of the world in search of the beasts in bloom … has all the hallmarks of adventure: nearly drowning in a river, scaling cliffs while dangling on lainas, being bitten by giant ants and stung by toxic trees … But it was worth it … and he also makes a serious broader point. <i>Rafflesia</i> … are threatened and on the edge of extinction. For all their strangeness, the very rarity of these gigantic living objects symbolises our continuing carelessness towards nature
- Charles Elliott, Literary Review
What is truly inspiring about this book is the positive collaboration that is going on between experts around the world (including indigenous people with knowledge of these plants) to try to put conservation strategies in place and protect these species from extinction
- Elanor Wexler, Association of Botanical Artists
The incredible story of one man's obsession to find and protect the world's largest flowers
As a child, Chris Thorogood dreamed of seeing Rafflesia - the plant with the world's largest flowers. He crafted life-size replicas in an abandoned cemetery, carefully bringing them to life with paper and paint. Today he is a botanist at the University of Oxford's Botanic Garden and has dedicated his life to studying the biology of such extraordinary plants, working alongside botanists and foresters in Southeast Asia to document these huge, mysterious blooms.
Pathless Forest is the story of his journey to study and protect this remarkable plant - a biological enigma, still little understood, which invades vines as a leafless parasite and steals its food from them. We join him on a mind-bending adventure, as he faces a seemingly impenetrable barrier of weird, wonderful and sometimes fearsome flora; finds himself smacking off leeches, hanging off vines, wading through rivers; and following indigenous tribes into remote, untrodden rainforests in search of Rafflesia's ghostly, foul-smelling blooms, more than a metre across.
We depend on plants for our very existence, but two in five of the world's species are threatened with extinction - nobody knows how many species of Rafflesia might already have disappeared through deforestation. Pathless Forest is part thrilling adventure story and part an inspirational call to action to safeguard a fast-disappearing wilderness. To view plants in a different way, as vital for our own future as for that of the planet we share. And to see if Rafflesia itself can be saved.