StoryGraph Saturday is a weekly thing where I randomly choose a book from my To Read pile on StoryGraph and show it off to both remind myself that it’s there and to show it to you in case you might find it interesting, too.

The Way Through the Woods: Of Mushrooms and Mourning
by Long Litt Woon
Memoir
291 pages
First published in 2019
From The StoryGraph:
A grieving widow feeling disconnected from life discovers a most unexpected obsession–hunting for mushrooms–in a story of healing and purpose.
Long Litt Woon moved to Norway from Malaysia as a nineteen-year-old exchange student. Soon after her arrival, she met Eiolf. He became the love of her life. After thirty-two years together, Eiolf’s sudden death left Woon struggling to imagine a life without the man who had been soulmate and best friend. Adrift in her grief, Woon signs up for a beginner’s course on mushrooming. She finds, to her surprise, that the hunt for mushrooms and mushroom knowledge rekindles her appetite for life, awakens her dulled senses, and provides a source of joy and meaning.
The Way Through the Woods tells the story of two parallel journeys: an inner one, through the landscape of mourning, and an outer one, into the fascinating realm of mushrooms–resilient, adaptable, dizzyingly diverse, and essential to nature’s cycles of death and rebirth. An anthropologist and certified mushroom expert, Woon brings a fresh eye and boundless curiosity to the natural world and takes readers from primordial Norwegian forests to hidden-in-plain-sight Central Park pathways. She also introduces a lovable and eccentric cast of mushroom obsessives. Her explorations of the connections between humans, nature, grief, and healing are universal.
I first heard about this on Olive Fellows’ BookTube channel, and she has raved about it more than once. I love a good memoir, and this one sounds wonderful, if sad. It’s available through my library, so I will be getting to this one fairly soon. Hopefully by spring.
When I read the subtitle, On Mushrooms and Mourning, I was a bit confused. But after reading the description it does sound like a fascinating read. It’s amazing all the different places we can find healing.
Haha! Yeah, I can see how that subtitle would be confusing if you didn’t know what was going on. I haven’t picked it up yet, though. Maybe in February.