
Trees, Shown to the Children
This beloved volume invites young readers into the world of trees, both the familiar species in their own backyard and the more distant varieties waiting to be discovered. Written with a child's sense of wonder yet grounded in careful observation, the book combines scientific accuracy with a poet's feeling for the natural world. Each tree becomes a character: the oak with its ancient dignity, the birch with its silver-paper bark, the pine that never loses its needles. The author treats trees not merely as specimens to be catalogued but as living presences worthy of friendship and attention. For generations of young naturalists, this book opened eyes to the arboreal wealth surrounding them, teaching that wonder and knowledge grow together. It remains a gentle classic for anyone who remembers discovering, as a child, that the world of plants holds infinite fascination.
X-Ray
Read by
Group Narration
9 readers
KevinS, Rita Boutros, Larry Wilson, czandra +5 more











