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Fiction

Ovid-19

On becoming trees

Arborescence by Rhett Davis

by Joseph Steinberg
October 2025, no. 480

Arborescence by Rhett Davis

Hachette, $32.99 pb, 304 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

The death of the white male novelist, lately the subject of a fistful of literary think-pieces, has been greatly exaggerated. Yet it is a truth widely acknowledged that such authors now lack much of the cultural cachet that they once brazenly wielded. The challenge for these writers has been to transmute themselves into narrative subjects more palatable to the sensibilities of a shifting readership. Some continue to doggedly write self-adjacent fictions; others have willed a kind of metamorphosis, their subjectivities transposed or otherwise suppressed. Then there are those that try to do both. In the case of Rhett Davis’s Arborescence, this results in a novel with a striking elevator pitch: it is about people turning into trees.

 


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Arborescence by Rhett Davis

Hachette, $32.99 pb, 304 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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