This is an absolutely extraordinary book. I鈥檒l admit that I聽was a bit disgruntled after the first third and put it down for a while. Two-thirds of the way in, though, I聽had goosebumps. By聽the end, I聽was babbling about it to complete strangers and determined to give a copy to just about everyone I聽know.
Hope Jahren鈥檚 Lab Girl is a combination of memoir and paean to her discipline of palaeobotany. She describes in lyrical detail growing up in the frozen wastes of Minnesota, going to college, doing her PhD at the University of聽California, Berkeley, establishing herself as a group leader first at the Georgia Institute of Technology, then Johns Hopkins University, and finally the University of Hawai鈥榠 at M膩noa. Interspersed with this account are chapters describing the plant world, and just as a seedling struggles to become the tree it is destined to be, this book describes Jahren鈥檚 emergence as the person and scientist she is meant to be.
So why my disgruntlement? The chapters describing her childhood and young adulthood portray a solitary person, determined to make sure that she would not remain in the small town in which she grew up, where everybody knew everybody else and where she was otherwise destined to become an assembly line worker in the local abattoir. Unlike her mother, who was denied the chance to finish college, Jahren escaped to the University of Minnesota. Her account of the pharmacy assistant job she took to support her studies is slightly terrifying (she was 鈥渁 sleep-starved teenager apprenticed to a聽chain-smoking barmaid鈥 dispensing potentially lethal cocktails of聽drugs), and she begins to come across as both a perfectionist and a workaholic. By the time she emerges as an assistant professor, she is working herself to the bone, constantly stressed, insomniac, always on the edge of failure 鈥 the tortured genius in an ivory tower who has to work harder, harder, ever harder.
This is why I聽wanted to shake Jahren, and why I聽put the book down. Such a narrative does neither the individual nor the academy any favours. The idea that you have to push yourself to聽the very edge of reason in order to succeed is dangerous, but nonetheless frighteningly prevalent 鈥 that you will never 鈥渕ake it鈥 as an academic unless you go through this baptism of fire. Worse, if you manage to somehow avoid this induction, you鈥檙e not a 鈥渢rue鈥 academic. It鈥檚 an idea I聽try to undermine whenever I聽hear it, and not just because this expectation damages individuals. It is also likely to turn off people, often women, who fear that they lack the necessary machismo and might end up asking themselves why on earth one would put oneself through so聽much pain. Another story along these lines, no matter how honest, is not one that needs to be told. But, as it turns out, that is not what Lab Girl is about at all.
糖心Vlog
What it is about is the fact that science, as an art form and a聽discipline, is forgiving and accepting of all of our personal quirks. The plants, the proteins, the quarks, the rocks, the oceans and the exoplanets that we study simply don鈥檛 care. There is space for all of us, with our personal oddities, if what is driving us is an聽understanding of how the world works and along the way we have some creative ideas. Science is oblivious as to whether we are slightly peculiar, make inappropriate comments, wear mismatched clothing, eschew make-up, swear too much, work the night shift, or live out of a聽van in a university car park. Our colleagues might, but science itself doesn鈥檛 care as we bring to it our craft. That is what this book is about, and it is both blazingly honest and genuinely beautiful.
This is also a story about family, about people and about relationships. This aspect is often absent from books about science and about scientists, or comes across as peripheral. Woven throughout Lab Girl is the story of Bill, who is Jahren鈥檚 colleague, friend and surrogate family member. Their friendship evolves and deepens throughout the book, describing how between them they always, somehow, manage to聽keep the show on the road. He聽is her lab manager, her muse, and the person who grounds her with the occasional much-needed 鈥渇uck it鈥. The strength and duration of their platonic relationship apparently puzzles many, who struggle to put it in the right box. But who needs a聽box?
糖心Vlog
Jahren eventually meets and marries Clint, and the description of how they manage their joint academic careers and a new family is straightforward and refreshing. However, Jahren is bipolar, and her honesty on this subject is brutal. It is something she adapts to over the years, but pregnancy and the consequent withdrawal of all medication gives rise to an episode that hospitalises her. It is painful to read, but highlights the human nature of the people at the core of what can seem to the outside world to be the driest of academic activities. Her drive, obsessiveness, perfectionism, insomnia and fretting suddenly appear in a different light. This is聽not how it has to be done 鈥 it is just how Jahren does it.
There are farcical elements as聽well: a cross-country trip to a聽conference that ends in skidding a聽van off the road in a snowstorm, a raiding party on a colleague鈥檚 work site, the Blu-Tack and sealing wax approach to setting up a lab that many of us will recognise, a minor lab explosion, an eight-hour side trip to Monkey Jungle, a Florida wildlife park, on the exhortation of a roadside billboard, and storing Bill鈥檚 shorn hair in the hollowed-out interior of a sweet gum tree. As someone in a discipline that rarely goes into the field, I聽found the insights into the realities of doing fieldwork particularly illuminating, and also rather daunting.
If you are familiar with , where she often writes about the challenges women face in the male-dominated academy, you will recognise Lab Girl鈥檚 astringent tone, but the subject is different. Although she alludes to the 鈥渙therness鈥 associated with being a woman in science, this topic is聽touched upon only lightly.
What I聽most liked about the book are Jahren鈥檚 examples of how inspiration strikes. Standing on a moist Irish hill coming to terms with the death of Bill鈥檚 father, immersed in grief and drizzle, she suddenly wonders why, at the top of a hill, the moss-covered ground is sodden. Why hasn鈥檛 the water run downhill? How is the moss holding on to聽it? How is the moss shaping the environment rather than passively making use of it? This leads to a聽cathartic frenzy of sample collecting. Unfortunately the fruits of this painstaking labour are later confiscated at the airport by聽zealous security staff and callously thrown in the bin with the discarded drink bottles.
Lab Girl speaks to me, another 鈥渢iny, living part of the scientific collective鈥, as I聽strive to weave my scientific theories out of whole cloth. Jahren is not just a scientist, though, but a poet who has given us insight into her mind and her passions, and I聽feel privileged to have been granted a glimpse. Who knew soil strata could be so聽interesting? But I聽wouldn鈥檛 take a聽road trip with her. Well, not unless I聽get to drive.
Cait MacPhee is professor of biological physics, University of聽Edinburgh.
Lab Girl: A Story of Trees, Science and Love
By Hope Jahren
Fleet Books, 304pp, 拢16.99
ISBN 9780349006192
Published 21 April 2016
The author
Hope Jahren, professor of geobiology at the University of Hawa鈥榠 M膩noa, where she heads the Jahren Laboratory, was born and raised in Minnesota.
鈥淭he Minnesota of my childhood sits squarely within that small portion of the US where there is snow on the ground nine months out of the year.聽The long cold (frozen) winter contrasted sharply with the short growing season, where abundant plants 鈥 including farm fields; it was a rural area 鈥 flourished rapidly starting each May.鈥澛
糖心Vlog
糖心Vlog
Of her childhood, Jahren recalls: 鈥淢y mother loved books, and my father loved science 鈥 he was a community college teacher.聽They both believed in learning as a lifelong process.鈥澛
Asked who encouraged her to believe that it would be possible for someone from a working-class background to progress to higher education, she says, 鈥淚n those years, university education at a Minnesota state institution was essentially free for any high school graduate with good grades 鈥 in fact my first year of university was completely paid for.聽The fees that followed were manageable if I worked 10-20 hours a week while studying, and so I performed a variety of jobs at the university (including a stint in a hospital pharmacy).鈥
As a Fulbright scholar, Jahren spent a year at the University of Copenhagen working in its botanical garden. 鈥淏eing surrounded by plants in such a beautiful historical setting, the setting of hundreds of years of study, was very enriching.聽I indulged in countless walks through the greenhouses as part of my daily work.鈥
In her blog , and in Lab Girl, she is outspoken about gender discrimination and sexual harassment in the academy. Does she believe her male peers are becoming more aware of these problems and more supportive of women, or are they still defensive?聽
鈥淪peaking out has brought many things.聽Many women, both inside and outside of science, have come to me with their stories 鈥 many of them horrific.聽I wish I could achieve justice for them.聽I grieve daily the fact that I cannot.聽Many of my male colleagues have drawn back from me, which is also hurtful.聽I also get a share of hate mail, much of it sexual in nature.聽However, the people with whom I work daily share my concerns, and staunchly support me.聽I will continue to speak out for as long as I believe my voice is necessary.鈥
In a recent interview, Jahren said: 鈥淢en鈥檚 science writing鈥ery often sounds like, 鈥楾his is what I know, and I鈥檓 going to tell it to you, and you鈥檙e going to take it the way I tell it because I鈥檓 the person who knows how to sell it.鈥 I鈥檝e been lectured to by men on science enough for two lifetimes.鈥
Does she think mansplaining is worse in science (or the academy) than elsewhere?聽
鈥淢ansplaining is worse in science because science is populated by men who have legitimately important material that they need to explain,鈥 she replies. 鈥淢y objection is that these descriptions seem often delivered to the listener without careful attention to how the listener is taking in the聽information.鈥澛
While scientists have always known that they are funny, quirky, interesting, varied, adventurous individuals, does Jahren believe that social media has helped the rest of the world find out?聽
鈥淭witter is an excellent resource for people who want to know about the daily life of the scientist, and to get a glimpse of the authentic informal personalities of the scientists themselves.聽Scrolling the hashtag #scicomm is a great place to start.鈥
糖心Vlog
Karen Shook
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Seeing the wood and all the trees
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




