Tending the Vines

Black Abundance in Eight Plants

Contributors

By Ashia S. Ajani

On Sale
Sep 15, 2026
Page Count
272 pages
Publisher
Timber Press
ISBN-13
9781643264769

This standout creative nonfiction debut explores the lives and histories of plants considered nonnative or invasive as metaphors for the Black experience  in America. 

In Tending the Vines, Ashia S. Ajani illuminates how 8 unique plants can help tell the story of the Black diaspora in this country. Each chapter is a deep dive into one plant, including eucalyptus, passionflower, wild mustard, pokeweed, and others. It traces the plant’s significance in African tradition, through its role in the Middle Passage and Chattel Slavery, and up to its importance in modern households and communities. It considers the complex rhetorical lives of these plants, most of which have been used as both ugly metaphors for Black incursion as well as powerful symbols for Black liberation. And it highlights the ethnobotanical uses of these plants that have sustained displaced populations for centuries. Throughout, Tending the Vines challenges the notion of “invasive species” and the concept of belonging, by contextualizing how plants move, are moved, and, of course, move us.

  • "A much-needed perspective on the thorny question of native and non-native, Tending the Vines is a carefully woven, lyrical meditation on the nature of belonging in a world built on legacies of exclusion."
    Jenny Odell, author of Saving Time
  • Tending the Vines announces the arrival of a bold new voice in environmental writing. Ashia S. Ajani gives us a new understanding of often maligned plants, while drawing thrilling connections between Black ecological pasts and the path to a greener future. In the tradition of black feminist writers like Zora Neale Hurston and Alice Walker, Tending the Vines draws upon the world of plants to reimagine Black life – our history, our trauma, our joy, and our liberation.”
    Lindsey Stewart, author of The Conjuring of America
  • “Ashia S. Ajani composes expert stories of overlooked nature: marginalized human communities, invasive species, native weeds, and the “uncharismatic.”  In doing so, she gives her readers a fresh and memorable opportunity to know both human beings as nature alongside various forms of plant life.  As a self-described “eco-griot and amateur historian,” Ajani inhabits the crossroads of “imagination and ancestral memory” and equips us with a rigorous vision of our environmental past, present, and future.  With writing that artfully details stories of communion and estrangement among humans and plants, Ajani moves across expansive, contested, and necessary terrain.”
    Kimberly Ruffin, Ph.D., author of Black on Earth: African American Eco-Literary Traditions

Formats and Prices

Price

$30.00

Price

$40.00 CAD

Ashia S. Ajani

About the Author

Ashia S. Ajani is a storyteller and environmental educator born and raised in Denver, CO, unceded territory of the Arapahoe, Cheyenne and Ute peoples. Writing as a queer Black femme, Ashia works to preserve, interrogate, and imagine how the Black diaspora has shaped and continues to shape land stewardship in the Western hemisphere. Their work has appeared in Sierra MagazineAtlas&Alice Magazine, The Journal, Sage Magazine, Them.us, and The Hopper Literary Magazine, among others. 

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