Nature's Magicians

How Leaves Conjure Up Our World

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About The Book

In this provocative reimagining of what it is to be a plant, an evolutionary biologist draws on a lifetime of research to offer a beguiling behind-the-scenes perspective on how plants really work—and how we truly depend on leaves for our survival. For readers of Entangled Life and An Immense World.

Leaves are so familiar that they are easy to overlook. Yet it is through leaves that plants perform their magic—not least building towers of wood from the unlikeliest of raw materials: carbon dioxide, a shower of rain, a heap of dung, and some sunlight. The air we breathe is cleaned by leaves. Everything we eat that comes from the land began as a leaf. More water is transpired through leaves than flows through all the streams and rivers on Earth.

Rendering complex concepts of plant biology into engaging and accessible prose, Jonathan Silvertown revels in the evolutionary success of these magicians of the natural world. If leaves are so vital to plant life, why did land plants have none at all for the first 50 million years of their evolution? Today, there are easily more leaves on Earth than stars in our galaxy. What changed? Silvertown explains how leaves grow, the ways they protect themselves against invaders, and the reasons they take such diverse shapes, sizes, and color.

By reframing the leaf as a solar panel, rainmaker, lunch box, chemistry set, shapeshifter, soil maker, geometric designer, and more, Nature’s Magicians reveals just how essential leaves are to life on this planet—and reminds us that nature’s smallest components often contain its greatest wonders.

About The Author

Photograph © Meg Jordan

Jonathan Silvertown is honorary professor at the Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Edinburgh. An evolutionary biologist who has published widely on plant population biology, he is the author of nine books, including Dinner with Darwin: Food, Drink, and Evolution, Selfish Genes to Social Beings: A Cooperative History of Life, and Nature’s Magicians: How Leaves Conjure Up Our World

Product Details

  • Publisher: Scribner (October 6, 2026)
  • Length: 256 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781668098431

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Raves and Reviews

"Nature's Magicians is an illuminating book, both a cornucopia of the myriad ways in which plants are adapted to survive and grow, and a lucid warning from the recent unsupported claims about the 'wood-wide web' and 'plant intelligence,' showing how science can be twisted and misrepresented." —Roland Ennos, author of The Age of Wood

"Enjoyable, highly stimulating, often enthralling, and frequently inspirational. This is a provocative re-imagining of what it means to be a plant." —Thomas J. Givnish, Henry Allan Gleason Professor Emeritus of Botany, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Nature's Magicians reminded me—a plant biologist—that there is always more to discover in a leaf. What Silvertown does best is take the science that specialists like me take for granted and transform it into something that will captivate any reader. From the canopies of tropical rainforests to the adaptations of desert plants, he captures the centrality of leaves in all our lives—creating food from sunlight, recycling water back into the atmosphere, making medicines and poisons, and providing our shelter and clothing. If you want a book that will make the people in your life finally understand why leaves matter, this is it.” —Pamela C. Ronald, Distinguished Professor, Dept Plant Pathology and the Genome Center at UC Davis and co-author of Tomorrow's Table: Organic Farming, Genetics and the Future of Food

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