The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession
Written by Susan Orlean
Narrated by Anna Fields
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
Susan Orlean
Susan Orlean has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1992. She is the New York Times bestselling author of seven books, including The Library Book, Rin Tin Tin, Saturday Night, and The Orchid Thief, which was made into the Academy Award–winning film Adaptation. She lives with her family and her animals in Los Angeles and may be reached at SusanOrlean.com and on Twitter @SusanOrlean.
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Reviews for The Orchid Thief
686 ratings46 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Several years ago a movie was made from this book. Of course, it bears little or no resemblance to what the author wrote about, but I'm grateful for it because otherwise I probably would never have picked up this volume to read.The book is an expansion of an article the author wrote for The New Yorker about John Laroche an extremely smart and eccentric Floridian who was arrested for stealing rare and endangered orchid from the Fakahatchee State Wildlife Preserve. His theory was that since he was using Seminole Indians to do the actual stealing, and he presumed that they were exempt from state and Federal laws, that the arrest would not hold up in court. He was incorrect in that assumption and the tale might have ended there if Orlean herself had not become fascinated by both Laroche and the strange culture that surrounds plant collectors in general and orchid collectors in particular.The book is a rambling history of the state of Florida and its development as well as the history of orchids and the lengths that collectors will go to procure a new specimen. If you have ever read Carl Hiassem's thrillers, you'll recognize the models for a bunch of his characters in this book. Florida must truly be populated with eccentrics of all stripes.This book is a fascinating read.
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- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was a fun read when you want something a bit ridiculous and weird to shake up your reading. With the whole Florida man trend in the news, this book definitely sums up the entire thing. It followed the trial of a man who stole orchid from a protected park and the showed how the results of that trial impacted his life and those involved in the issue. It was definitely a weird read and not for everyone but I’m happy I gave it a try.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Orchid obsession is the main protagonist of this ramble through history and then, the modern day orchid enthusiasts. That is illustrated most often through the actions of a variety of orchid tradesmen seeking fame and fortune, the zaniest of which is John Laroche. It drags in places and just ends, still maybe later than it should have. Still, an interesting examination of orchids and their science.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I just didn't find this very interesting, which was surprising as The Library Book is one of my all time favorites.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It felt like exactly what it was. An articles
worth of story that has been needlessly stretched to fill an entire book. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An article turns into a book about people who are obsessed about these flowers that grow in Florida. Focus is particularly on John Laroche, a strange but charasmatic guy who wants people to think he does good by being bad. Chock full of trivia about orchid collecting and collectors, with emphasis on the scene in Florida.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Nice write up, try to apply this book's process to grows Orchid in my garden.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This was a bit of a slog, but am glad I finished it. Interesting history of the craziness that has been Florida.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I love the non-fiction “thief” books that explore collectors and the obsessive need that drives them to steal or at least break the law in pursuit of their passion and I’ve read a lot of them, but somehow I missed Susan Orlean’s The Orchid Thief. When an audio copy popped up on my Libby as I was desperately looking for something to listen to I was excited, and it did not disappoint as she examined Floridian John Laroche and his quest for exotic orchids. It is missing the historical depth of The Feather Thief or The Falcon Thief, but in a way, this made the book shorter and easier to get through. Overall, an interesting look at Florida, orchids, and people obsessed with the beautiful and mysterious flowers.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The first thing you need to know is that this is a book about Florida and orchidists. I am a (born and bred) Floridian raised in a family of orchidists.I preface this review with these facts because there’s going to be a strongly sentimental bias to my feelings about this book. I can’t possibly be objective about either subject, because — let’s call it “Old Florida” even though I’m young enough to have missed out on the truly old Florida — is what my soul is made of. If it were a visible thing it would be full of scrub forest, swamp land and the Gulf of Mexico (and hush puppies and iced tea). And no way could I be objective about orchids; I literally grew up in greenhouses. My mother’s flower shop, which my father’s greenhouses and laboratory were attached to, was a road, a small-town library parking lot, and a dirt alley away from our home. I’m pretty sure were there a way to tally up time spent at home vs. the shop, the shop would actually win. And there are very few memories of my dad that pop into my head that don’t involve him watering his orchids, replanting his orchids, or bent over his sanitised glove box – a design of his own creation – or… the least pleasant from a sensory aspect: him cooking up his growing media, which often consisted of combinations of vegetable and fruit never, ever, designed to be together, like bananas and potatoes (omg, the smell). I have lost hours of my life to greenhouses sprinkled throughout Southwest Florida (and Illinois), and orchid shows, before I was old enough to be left to my own devices.So believe me when I say that, other than my pedantic nitpicking over calling Florida’s ecosystem a jungle, Susan Orlean nailed both the state and the crazy orchid loving people in it. Including herself in the story creates a nice foil for the eccentric mix of people that make up the less civilised places of Florida (which is pretty much all the places). My sister would be a better judge of how close she came to the personalities of the players; I recognised the names but given my relationship with orchids (YOU MAY CALL ME DEATH), I was only ever a spectator, and a pretty disinterested as only a teenager can be, but Orlean captures the atmosphere, the close-knit community and the cattiness of the orchid world perfectly.According to the publisher and book flap, this is a book about John Larouche (whom I’d never heard of until I read this), but really, it’s about all orchidists and their often unfathomable passion for a plant that is, objectively, ugly. Until it flowers, and then it’s spectacular. Specifically, this book is about the Ghost Orchid, a Florida native known only to live in a very few spots in the Fakahatchee Strand. A plant that consists of nothing but roots and a flower, no leaves. While Larouche is absent for much of the book, the Ghost Orchid is always present. This is a good thing because I doubt anybody could take an awful lot of a character like Larouche.I could meander on in this review for quite some time, but I wouldn’t really be talking about the book, so I’ll just say: it was good; it was enjoyable and well written and enlightening. If eccentric characters a la Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil appeal to you along with the swampy, humid, atmosphere of Florida, you might find something to like in this read.On a slightly related side note, my father passed away on this date in 2004, so the read felt especially timely for me. What made it even more poignant though, was what I found when doing a bit of googling about the Ghost Orchid; it seems Larouche was not entirely correct when he said nobody could breed the Ghost Orchid (breed, not clone, which is what Larouche was trying to do): it turns out my daddy could, and did. I found this except on an orchid site out of Delray Beach called HBI Orchids:The Ghost Orchid, Polyrrhiza lindeni (old school name). We at HBI have been working on growing ghost orchids from seed for over 28 years ever since we first bought 3 ghost orchids flasks from Larry Evans. Larry did curating and flasking work for the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens in Sarasota. Selby once green housed the top premier specimens of this Florida species. The ghost orchid parents used by Larry originated in the Fakahatchee Strand and were first bred by him many years before ghost orchids were designated as an endangered species. Fakahatchee ghost orchids with their longer frog-legs/tendrils and ghostly all-white flower surpass the truncated short-tendril inferior class lindeni green-flower ghost orchid pretenders named Dendrophylax sallei from Cuba and Dominican Republic in any competition and will always be the more valuable type of this vanishing species to own. I clearly remember my dad doing Selby’s lab/flask work; at that time they couldn’t do it themselves without contamination (orchid seed has to be handled in a completely sterile environment, sprinkled across growing medium in sealed, sterile flasks; otherwise just about any microbe floating in the air will overtake and kill the seedlings before they can start), so they’d asked him to do it in his lab. But I never knew they were ghost orchids or how special they are. So tip of the hat to Orlean for leading me back to my father in more ways than I bargained on.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fascinating. Humans and orchids are both very strange.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I think fans of true crime will be disappointed. The crime is one of the least arresting parts of the book. The bizarre history of orchids, and people's obsession with them was far more interesting to me.
I always love when non fiction books read as easily as a story and contain fascinating facts that don't come off as dry and weighty. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Having read Susan Orlean's book about the LA Public Library (The Library Book) I was interested in reading some of her other books.... this one popped up first....It was an interesting read about the hunt for wild orchids and all that goes along with it.My main issue was the fact that there were WAY TOO MANY Latin plant names and not a single picture of any of these plants. I love to look at orchids, but not knowing one from the other.... It would have been nice to actually see a picture every now and then.I also am aware that I read this book about 20 years after it was first published..... noticing how people smuggled tons of plants and seeds in their bras, underwear, shoes and simply in their suitcases makes me understand why customs, Homeland Security etc. are now so concerned with anybody even bringing in an accidental apple!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I think I was expecting more, given how expensive even the Kindle edition of this book is on Amazon. Somehow, when a digital book comes with a $17 price tag, I figure it’ll be special. It was an interesting enough read for the most part and I loved most of the descriptive passages. S Orlean has a real handle on metaphor and on building images and she really brought the swamps and nature to life for me. She also writes with a sense of humour that works for me and she confirmed that our decision to skip southern Florida, when we passed through the state, was a good one. Arm chair travel works for me.But. While there were some really interesting sections of the book - I had no idea how obsessed some people are about orchids & knew nothing about the orchid ‘industry’ or history - the interesting sections were countered by tedium. I found the organization of the chapters choppy and the flow weird and confusing as to time frames. I finished it but was looking forward to being done from about two thirds in. Maybe sooner.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I started reading about this book because I thought I was interested in learning about orchids and some of the culture around them. I found out that I am not *that* interested in orchids and Florida. I read the first 60 pages of this and it took me awhile to get through that. I kept finding other things (any other thing) to do rather than read this book. So, I ended up setting this aside.The beginning of this book comes off as some strange ode to Florida; this really struck a false note with me because I went to Florida a lot as a kid (my grandparents lived there) and I do not like Florida...I will never like Florida.After the diatribe about how awesome and unique Florida is the book goes into a ton of detail on orchids. This was kind of cool but it was just too much for me. The way Olean writes is almost overly descriptive; she has a habit of spending a long time describing things and making long lists of items which came off as a bit text-bookish and was just a huge info dump.Overall this book just wasn’t my cup of tea. It was boring and a bit preachy about the wonders of Florida. I would recommend reading the first chapter of the book before buying and seeing how you like it; the first chapter is pretty representative of the book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I really enjoyed this - a well written investigative history of Florida, plants, orchids, crazy people and a bundle of other fascinating things. No real plot but definitely a story.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I really enjoyed this book. It provided a lot of information about orchids and the people who are obsessed with them. I enjoyed the history that the author included in the book, starting with the "discovery" of the new world and building up to the present day. Having said that, I can only assume that the author got the book published while her editor was away on vacation. She frequently lapsed into side-stories that added nothing to the story and served only as filler. It was overall a pretty well written book, but needed some real editing.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Orchid Thief by Susan OrleanShe travels to FL when she reads of the arrest of John LaRoche. He and Seminole tribe members stole orchids from protected state property. Some people are obsessed with these plants. She follows them and learns all about the plants. He had hoped to clone and sell the plants.When in FL we had visited the world's largest orchid place in Kissimmee so I had wanted to read about this story.Liked the places the reporter traveled to obtain information about varieties of the orchids. Liked how the process is described on how to mutant and graft the plants.I received this book from National Library Service for my BARD (Braille Audio Reading Device).
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The setting in this interesting book is South Florida. It's about orchids and the passion they invoke in people all over the world. Susan Orlean does a great job educating us about the history of orchids and the people who collect them. Since I live in Central Florida and have been to South Florida a few times, I recognized names of places and enjoyed her depiction of the area. The swampy area called the Fakahatchee Strand and what it's like to hunt plants in it was hair-raising.This talented author walked through the swamp in mucky stuff up to her waist hunting orchids, especially the 'ghost' orchid. The protagonist is an eccentric man who is an orchid thief from whom she learns about botanical obsession. There are several other charismatic people involved in her journey. Also, she tells about the Seminole Indian Tribe that populates some of that land. She relays information on tribal customs, names, and laws.If you want to read a non-fiction book that seems like fiction, this is the book for you. You don't have to be an orchid or even a plant lover to enjoy it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Over all it's a fascinating look at orchid collecting, the industry, the hobby, the culture around it and its history. The book starts as the author attempts to follow the trial of a man accused of trying to steal (and clone) the Ghost Orchid which grows in the wilds of Florida. The trial quickly gets left behind as the chapters follow their own orchid related tangents. By the last eighty pages I was ready for the book to refocus on the main "characters" as the book had begun to drag.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Rex Stout’s fat detective suffered from orchidelirium. He would never vary his routine of working in his famous plant rooms on the top floor of the brownstone house no matter what the emergency, to Archie Goodwin’s consternation.
Like bibliomania, orchidelirium is a mania that involves collecting — unlimited collecting. The orchid is “a jewel of a flower on a haystack of a plant.” Orchids have evolved into the “biggest flowering plant family on earth,” and many survive only in small niches they have carved out for themselves. They are found in many different environments, and human hybridization of the plants creates more varieties all the time.
Those afflicted can never seem to get enough. Susan Orlean describes this mania in her fascinating book, which is a compendium of information about orchids as well. The number of orchid species is unknown, and more are discovered or developed all the time. Larceny among collectors is not unknown, and Orlean describes John Laroche, a man of many manias — he collected turtles, and I mean lots of turtles, as a child. Laroche dreamed of making a fortune by finding the one really rare specimen of plant that he could then breed and sell. Seeing himself as a moral thief, Laroche, rationalized his larcenous behavior. He allied himself with the Seminoles, knowing that they were exempt from federal laws prohibiting the collection of wild orchids, so that he could hopefully collect and breed the rare ghost orchid. His justification was that once bred it would likely no longer be collected illegally.
Apparently, flower theft is epidemic in Florida; one case Orlean cites was the theft of a fifteen-foot palm tree. The tree was dug up and the hole filled in during the night. How they managed that with no one noticing is somewhat startling. One farmer lost $20,000 worth of bell peppers from his fields. He decided to get out of the business.
Laroche merely provides anecdotal backdrops for a very interesting history of the mania for orchid collecting. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Orchid Thief took me a little while to finish even though it is a thin little book. It was full of information about orchids, the passions that drive collectors to find the perfect orchid or to own all of something beautiful or rare. I found out about pollinating and growing new species as well as receiving a first hand look in the dense bogs and forests that house and nurture rare species of orchids. I was surprised by the greed and search for ownership that the scenes portrayed when looking at the passions that drove some of the collectors. This book is a good read for gardeners and collectors and those that wish to examine some of the intentions that drive individuals to collect, preserve and own precious things. I gave it a 3.5 but rated it 4 because it is better than a 3.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Orchid Thief is kind of a strange book. On the one hand, it's about John Laroche, a plant dealer and outcast, who was arrested in 1994 with a group three Seminole Indians for stealing rare orchids from a southern Florida swamp. This is where Susan Orlean began with the story after seeing a tiny blurb in a small, local newspaper. The book grows far beyond that source material, however, and sort of meanders through the orchid world, revealing the beauty of the plants and the obsession people have about collecting them. But Laroche's is only one part of the story. Over the course of the book, Orlean looks at the biology of the orchids (noting that there are over 100,000 species), goes in the history of orchid hunting and the mania of collectors when the plants were first discovered, meets various collectors at functions and explores their history as collectors, points out orchid grower rivalries, shares the history of the Fakahatchee Strand Preserve and describes it in lovingly detail, goes into the history of the Seminole Indians in the area and their local heroes, among other little tidbits of facts and history and science, all while weaving in her own experiences in Florida and her obsession with discovering why people are so obsessed with these flowers with Laroche cropping up every once in a while like an odd, lanky swamp bird. Thus, the book is an unusual mixture of crime story, character sketch, historical account, biology lesson, and travel memoir, one that is far from objective and deeply fascinating to read. For those who may not be aware, The Orchid Thief is the basis for the 2002 movie Adaptation, staring Nicolas cage. And reading it now, I can certainly see why Charlie Kaufman had such trouble adapting the book into a movie. There is no way to do a straight adaptation, as the kind of meandering quality wouldn't work on the screen and the ending in the book (while a perfect declaration of the incomplete quality of everyday life just going on) wouldn't work for a movie format. In a sense, Kaufman's adaptation of the book is perfect, because just as Susan Orlean took a story meant to be about Laroche and his adventures and controversies and she interjected herself into the story, making it as much about her own experience as about Laroche, Kaufman took her book and made a movie script that was just as much about himself (or an idea of himself) as it was about the story — which is kind of a cool parallel.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is one of my favorite books ever. I read this book when I had just moved to Florida and found the observations of Orlean extremely insightful of this strange state. I enjoyed the adventures of the real life historic Orchid hunters, and the flurry of popularity and danger a simple flower could insight. But orchids are not simple flowers, nor are those who covet them. The biggest reason I liked this book is that it was created over a single, small newspaper article Susan Orlean happened to come across and decide to investigate.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Why did I think this was a book of fiction? It must have been the title, and the fact that it was made into a movie (and, I understand, a movie about the movie). I'm imagining what the movie makers left in, what tehy took out, and what they added added to sustain it.So it's not a book of fiction. It's more like a John McPhee book, chock full of people, science, history, and happenstance. Susan Orlean gets hooked on an orchid thief - journalisticly speaking - and investigates the man and the world of orchids in Florida (mainly) and the mania for them worldwide. Aside from the original manic enthusiast, she introduces other orchid growers and breeders, history of orchid hunters and their patrons, and the murky overlap of the law as it relates to people in general versus Seminoles in particular. This was originally an article in the New Yorker (McPhee again), and it shows, as she pads the book with side trips into history, jungles, flower shows, mud, alligators and, above all, the orchids themselves. For a book all about them, filled with detailed descriptions of them, not to have pictures of them is a staggering tease. And she repeats herself one too many times in very specific ways (didn't she already talk about why that guy hated the other guy?), which makes it feel a bit pasted together.So why did I finish the book? I was looking for the punchline, the button on the story about the orchid thief himself. And she does provide same - it's just not the payoff I had hoped for.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I found this book to be overrated and disappointing. As another reviewer pointed out, it was more like a very long magazine article than a book. Orlean threw in a lot of information about orchids, orchid hunters, orchid obsessives etc., but to me it didn't add up to a coherent whole. The paragraphs were way too long and run-on as well.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is a great story of survival. So many of the characters are fighting for their survival; be it from domestic violence, mental illness or personal demons. The characters come to life off the pages, some to love, some to hate, it is a great mix of both. I did think the story to be a bit wordy at times, it seemed some of the narrative could have been cut out without hurting the story. This would be a very interesting title for a book club as there are many topics to discuss.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a great work of nonfiction -- though, even though I gave it four stars, I do think it worked better as a magazine story than as a full-length book. But the four stars recognize 1) Orlean's excellent reporting and writing skills in teasing out both the historical weirdnesses of orchid mania and the contemporary weirdnesses of orchid collectors and 2) her truly excellent capture of South Florida weirdness, something that is often done cartoonishly (Elmore Leonard, Carl Hiaasen) but rarely straight-up.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5At one time in my life I had the orchid bug. I belonged to the local orchid society and rescued sad immature plants from supermarkets to see what they might produce. I read, I studied, and I visited my plants daily to check on their condition. I so understand the characters in this book (though I never in my life stole a single plant).I listened to the audio version read by Jennifer Jay Myers while painting my bathroom. Primarily the story is about a man obsessed with obtaining and propagating a rare orchid found in the Florida Everglades, but the reader learns about the history of manic collectors and hunters and how orchid nurseries grew in popularity in the U.S. One also learns a lot about the fascinating orchid: why the incredible range in colors and shapes, where they are found, and most of all, how people become passionate orchid growers.Some of the information about hunters and collectors reminded me of a book I read about the Lord God Bird, one of many species of birds hunted to extinction or the brink thereof for their feathers used to ornament women's hats. This was another example of man's using nature for his own benefit without considering the impact on nature. Naturists will enjoy this book.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In her quest to find out more about orchids, author Orleans finds the characters and personalities that keep the floral economy spinning. She becomes a bit smitten herself in her quest to find a blooming "ghost orchid" in a Florida swamp. Lots of history about the growth of orchids worldwide and how 19th and early 20th century Americans and Western Europeans pretty successfully raped the tropics of many species.