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The Orchid Thief: A True Story of Beauty and Obsession Kindle Edition
A modern classic of personal journalism, The Orchid Thief is Susan Orlean’s wickedly funny, elegant, and captivating tale of an amazing obsession. Determined to clone an endangered flower—the rare ghost orchid Polyrrhiza lindenii—a deeply eccentric and oddly attractive man named John Laroche leads Orlean on an unforgettable tour of America’s strange flower-selling subculture, through Florida’s swamps and beyond, along with the Seminoles who help him and the forces of justice who fight him. In the end, Orlean—and the reader—will have more respect for underdog determination and a powerful new definition of passion.
In this new edition, coming fifteen years after its initial publication and twenty years after she first met the “orchid thief,” Orlean revisits this unforgettable world, and the route by which it was brought to the screen in the film Adaptation, in a new retrospective essay.
Look for special features inside. Join the Random House Reader’s Circle for author chats and more.
Praise for The Orchid Thief
“Stylishly written, whimsical yet sophisticated, quirkily detailed and full of empathy . . . The Orchid Thief shows [Orlean’s] gifts in full bloom.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Fascinating . . . an engrossing journey [full] of theft, hatred, greed, jealousy, madness, and backstabbing.”—Los Angeles Times
“Orlean’s snapshot-vivid, pitch-perfect prose . . . is fast becoming one of our national treasures.”—The Washington Post Book World
“Orlean’s gifts [are] her ear for the self-skewing dialogue, her eye for the incongruous, convincing detail, and her Didion-like deftness in description.”—Boston Sunday Globe
“A swashbuckling piece of reporting that celebrates some virtues that made America great.”—The Wall Street Journal
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBallantine Books
- Publication dateJuly 20, 2011
- File size2.7 MB
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
The Orchid Thief centers on south Florida and John Laroche, a quixotic, charismatic schemer once convicted of attempting to take endangered orchids from the Fakahatchee swamp, a state preserve. Laroche, a horticultural consultant who once ran an extensive nursery for the Seminole tribe, dreams of making a fortune for the Seminoles and himself by cloning the rare ghost orchid Polyrrhiza lindenii. Laroche sums up the obsession that drives him and so many others: I really have to watch myself, especially around plants. Even now, just being here, I still get that collector feeling. You know what I mean. I'll see something and then suddenly I get that feeling. It's like I can't just have something--I have to have it and learn about it and grow it and sell it and master it and have a million of it. Even Orlean--so leery of orchid fever that she immediately gives away any plant that's pressed upon her by the growers in Laroche's circle--develops a desire to see a ghost orchid blooming and makes several ultimately unsuccessful treks into the Fakahatchee. Filled with Palm Beach socialites, Native Americans, English peers, smugglers, and naturalists as improbably colorful as the tropical blossoms that inspire them, this is a lyrical, funny, addictively entertaining read. --Barrie Trinkle
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Review
“Fascinating . . . an engrossing journey [full] of theft, hatred, greed, jealousy, madness, and backstabbing.”—Los Angeles Times
“Orlean’s snapshot-vivid, pitch-perfect prose . . . is fast becoming one of our national treasures.”—The Washington Post Book World
“Orlean’s gifts [are] her ear for the self-skewing dialogue, her eye for the incongruous, convincing detail, and her Didion-like deftness in description.”—Boston Sunday Globe
“A swashbuckling piece of reporting that celebrates some virtues that made America great.”—The Wall Street Journal
“Stylishly written, whimsical yet sophisticated, quirkily detailed and full of empathy . . . The Orchid Thief shows [Orlean’s] gifts in full bloom.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Fascinating . . . an engrossing journey [full] of theft, hatred, greed, jealousy, madness, and backstabbing.”—Los Angeles Times
“Orlean’s snapshot-vivid, pitch-perfect prose . . . is fast becoming one of our national treasures.”—The Washington Post Book World
“Orlean’s gifts [are] her ear for the self-skewing dialogue, her eye for the incongruous, convincing detail, and her Didion-like deftness in description.”—Boston Sunday Globe
“A swashbuckling piece of reporting that celebrates some virtues that made America great.”—The Wall Street Journal
From the Publisher
--Anna Mundow, The New York Daily News
"Orlean's hilariously reported, discursive narrative wanders off into Seminole history, real-estate fraud, stolen flora, and the scary, swampy Fakahatchee Strand. Just when you fear you're lost in the Everglades, she returns to the flower at hand, and unleashes some delirious prose....Orlean shows great restraint and never adopts an orchid--readers may not manage to be so cold-blooded."
--Alexandra Lange, New York Magazine
"Artful...In Ms. Orlean's skillful handling, her orchid story turns out to be distinctly 'something more.' Getting to know Mr. Laroche allows her to explore multiple subjects: orchids, Seminole history, the ecology of the Fakahatchee Strand, the fascination of Florida to con men....All that she writes here fits together because it is grounded in her personal experience...acres of opportunity where intriguing things can be found."
--Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, The New York Times
"The collecting mania that Susan Orlean has so painstakingly described is, like the orchid, a small thing of grandeur, a passion with a pedigree...Stylishly written, whimsical yet sophisticated, quirkily detailed and full of empathy for a person you might not have thorugh about empethetically...The Orchid Thief shows her gifts in full bloom."
--Ted Conover, The New York Times Book Review
"Orlean writes in a keenly observant mode reminiscent of John McPhee and Diane Ackerman....In prose as lush and full of surprises as the Fakahatchee itself, Orlean connects orchid-related excesses of the past with the exploits of the present so dramatically an orchid will never just be an orchid again."
--Booklist
"Orlean is a beautiful writer, and her story is compelling even for those whose knowledge of orchids is limited to the long-ago prom corsage. The Orchid Thief is a lesson in the dark, dangerous, sometimes hilarious nature of obsession--any obsession. You sometimes don't want to read on, but find you can't help it."
--Anita Manning, USA Today
"If you liked MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD AND EVIL, this new nonfiction work by Susan Orlean will hold you utterly spellbound. Like many orchids, it's a beautiful hybrid: part crime story (about orchid poaching in the wild swamps of Florida), part exotic read (about a fanatic society of flower breeders). Led by the title character, a charismatic plant smuggler, you'll journey with Orlean through a strangely fascinating, almost mystical subculture."
--Glamour
"Readers suffering from the impeachment blues can start the new year right with The Orchid Thief, a swashbuckling piece of reporting that celebrates some virtues that made America great. Here are visionary passions and fierce obsessions; heroic settings; outsize characters, entrepreneurs on the edge of the frontier, adventurers seeking the bubble reputation....Ms. Orlean, an intrepid sociologist among the orchid fanatics, is also a poetic observer of the Fakahatchee swamp. There's an offhand brilliance in her accounts of its weird beauty and discomforts. But the most compelling sections of this fascinating book deal with the orchids themselves....Zestful."
--Frances Taliaferro, The Wall Street Journal
"The landscapes of John Laroche and the state of Florida elicit some of Susan Orlean's best writing....her ear for self-skewing dialogue, her eye for the incongruous, convincing detail, and her Didion-like deftness in description....Such rapturous evocations are reason enough to read Orlean's book."
--Dean Crawford, The Boston Globe
From the Back Cover
--Michael Pollan
Between hardcovers, nobody but Carl Hiaasen can talk Florida to me the way Susan Orlean has in The Orchid Thief, which so richly captures the Sunshine State's bizarre personality, its fevered optimism, its hurricane whims of passion, the hard heat of those not always legal dreams that have made its citizens notorious. Orlean has crafted a classic tale of tropic desire, steamy and fragrant and smart and entertaining."
--Bob Shacoch1s
The Orchid Thief is the finest piece of nonfiction I've read in years: characters so juicy and wonderfully weird they might have stepped out of a novel, except these people are real. The Orchid Thief is everything we expect from the very best literature. It opens our eyes to an extraordinary new universe and stirs our passion for the people who populate the world. Susan Orlean is a writer of immense talent. I would follow her anywhere."
--James W. Hall
Hot orchids are the starting point of Susan Orlean's account of plants and people obsessed with them in the weird world that is south Florida. Along the way, she meets Seminoles, alligators, and a variety of crazy white men. The Orchid Thief provides further, compelling evidence that truth is stranger than fiction. In this case it makes most entertaining reading."
--Andrew We1l
Susan Orlean's prose is always lucid, lyrical, and deceptively comfortable, but with The Orchid Thief, she's in danger of launching a national epidemic of orchid mania. The passion is infectious and addictive."
--Katherine Dunn
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Orchid Thief
By Susan OrleanHighBridge Audio
Copyright © 2002 Susan OrleanAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9781565116894
Chapter One
The Millionaire's Hothouse
John Laroche is a tall guy, skinny as a stick, pale-eyed, slouch-shouldered, and sharply handsome, in spite of the fact that he is missing all his front teeth. He has the posture of al dente spaghetti and the nervous intensity of someone who plays a lot of video games. Laroche is thirty-six years old. Until recently he was employed by the Seminole Tribe of Florida, setting up a plant nursery and an orchid-propagation laboratory on the tribe's reservation in Hollywood, Florida.
Laroche strikes many people as eccentric. The Seminoles, for instance, have two nicknames for him: Troublemaker and Crazy White Man. Once, when Laroche was telling me about his childhood, he remarked, "Boy, I sure was a weird little kid." For as long as he can remember he has been exceptionally passionate and driven. When he was about nine or ten, his parents said he could pick out a pet. He decided to get a little turtle. Then he asked for ten more little turtles. Then he decided he wanted to breed the turtles, and then he started selling turtles to other kids, and then he could think of nothing but turtles and then decided that his life wasn't worth living unless he could collect one of every single turtle species known to mankind, including one of those sofa-sized tortoises from the Galapagos. Then, out of the blue, he fell out of love with turtles and fell madly in love with Ice Age fossils. He collected them, sold them, declared that he lived for them, then abandoned them for something else-lapidary I think-then he abandoned lapidary and became obsessed with collecting and resilvering old mirrors. Laroche's passions arrived unannounced and ended explosively, like car bombs. When I first met him he lusted only for orchids, especially the wild orchids growing in Florida's Fakahatchee Strand. I spent most of the next two years hanging around with him, and at the end of those two years he had gotten rid of every single orchid he owned and swore that he would never own another orchid for as long as he lived. He is usually true to his word. Years ago, between his Ice Age fossils and his old mirrors, he went through a tropical-fish phase. At its peak, he had more than sixty fish tanks in his house and went skin-diving regularly to collect fish. Then the end came. He didn't gradually lose interest: he renounced fish and vowed he would never again collect them and, for that matter, he would never set foot in the ocean again. That was seventeen years ago. He has lived his whole life only a couple of feet west of the Atlantic, but he has not dipped a toe in it since then.
Laroche tends to sound like a Mr. Encyclopedia, but he did not have a rigorous formal education. He went to public school in North Miami; other than that, he is self-taught. Once in a while he gets wistful about the life he thinks he would have led if he had applied himself more conventionally. He believes he would have probably become a brain surgeon and that he would have made major brain-research breakthroughs and become rich and famous. Instead, he lives in a frayed Florida bungalow with his father and has always scratched out a living in unaverage ways. One of his greatest assets is optimism-that is, he sees a profitable outcome in practically every life situation, including disastrous ones. Years ago he spilled toxic pesticide into a cut on his hand and suffered permanent heart and liver damage from it. In his opinion, it was all for the best because he was able to sell an article about the experience ("Would You Die for Your Plants?") to a gardening journal. When I first met him, he was working on a guide to growing plants at home. He told me he was going to advertise it in High Times, the marijuana magazine. He said the ad wouldn't mention that marijuana plants grown according to his guide would never mature and therefore never be psychoactive. The guide was one of his all-time favorite projects. The way he saw it, he was going to make lots of money on it (always excellent) plus he would be encouraging kids to grow plants (very righteous) plus the missing information in the guide would keep these kids from getting stoned because the plants they would grow would be impotent (incalculably noble). This last fact was the aspect of the project he was proudest of, because he believed that once kids who bought the guide realized they'd wasted their money trying to do something illegal-namely, grow and smoke pot-they would also realize, thanks to John Laroche, that crime doesn't pay. Schemes like these, folding virtue and criminality around profit, are Laroche's specialty. Just when you have finally concluded that he is a run-of-the-mill crook, he unveils an ulterior and somewhat principled but always lucrative reason for his crookedness. He likes to describe himself as a shrewd bastard. He loves doing things the hard way, especially if it means that he gets to do what he wants to do but also gets to leave everyone else wondering how he managed to get away with it. He is quite an unusual person. He is also the most moral amoral person I've ever known.
I met John Laroche for the first time a few years ago, at the Collier County Courthouse in Naples, Florida. I was in Florida at the time because I had read a newspaper article reporting that a white man-Laroche-and three Seminole men had been arrested with rare orchids they had stolen out of a Florida swamp called the Fakahatchee Strand State Preserve, and I wanted to know more about the incident. The newspaper story was short but alluring. It described the Fakahatchee as a wild swamp near Naples filled with exceptional plants and trees, including some that don't grow anywhere else in the United States and some that grow nowhere else in the world. All wild orchids are now considered endangered, and it is illegal to take them out of the woods anywhere, and particularly out of a state property like the Fakahatchee. According to the newspaper, Laroche was the ringleader of the poachers. He provided the arresting officers with the proper botanical varietal names for all the stolen plants and explained that the plants were bound for a laboratory where they were going to be cloned by the millions and then sold to orchid collectors around the world.
I read lots of local newspapers and particularly the shortest articles in them, and most particularly any articles that are full of words in combinations that are arresting. In the case of the orchid story I was interested to see the words "swamp" and "orchids" and "Seminoles" and "cloning" and "criminal" together in one short piece. Sometimes this kind of story turns out to be something more, some glimpse of life that expands like those Japanese paper balls you drop in water and then after a moment they bloom into flowers, and the flower is so marvelous that you can't believe there was a time when all you saw in front of you was a paper ball and a glass of water. The judge in the Seminole orchid case had scheduled a hearing a few weeks after I read the article, so I arranged to go down to Naples to see if this ball of paper might bloom.
It was the dead center of winter when I left New York; in Naples it was warm and gummy, and from my plane I could see thick thunderclouds trolling along the edge of the sky. I checked into a big hotel on the beach, and that evening I stood on my balcony and watched the storm explode over the water. The hearing was the next morning at nine. As I pulled out of the hotel garage the parking attendant warned me to drive carefully. "See, in Naples you got to be careful," he said, leaning in my window. He smelled like daiquiris. It was probably suntan lotion. "When it rains here," he added, "cars start to fly." There are more golf courses per person in Naples than anywhere else in the world, and in spite of the hot, angry weather everyone around the hotel was dressed to play, their cleated shoes tapping out a clickety-clickety-clickety tattoo on the sidewalks.
The courthouse was a few miles south of town in a fresh-looking building made of bleached stone pocked with fossilized seashells. When I arrived, there were a few people inside, nobody talking to anybody, no sounds except for the creaking of the wooden benches and the sound of some guy in the front row gunning his throat. After a moment I recognized Laroche from the newspaper picture I'd seen. He was not especially dressed up for court. He was wearing wraparound Mylar sunglasses, a polyblend shirt printed with some sort of scenic design, a Miami Hurricanes baseball cap, and worn-out grayish trousers that sagged around his rear. He looked as if he wanted a cigarette. He was starting to stand up when the judge came in and settled in her chair; he sat down and looked cross. The prosecutor then rose and read the state's charges-that on December 21, 1994, Laroche and his three Seminole assistants had illegally removed more than two hundred rare orchid and bromeliad plants from the Fakahatchee and were apprehended leaving the swamp in possession of four cotton pillowcases full of flowers. They were accused of criminal possession of endangered species and of illegally removing plant life from state property, both of which are punishable by jail time and fines.
The judge listened with a blank expression, and when the prosecutor finished she called Laroche to testify. He made a racket getting up from his seat and then sauntered to the center of the courtroom with his head cocked toward the judge and his thumbs hooked in his belt loops. The judge squinted at him and told him to state his name and address and to describe his expertise with plants. Laroche jiggled his foot and shrugged. "Well, Your Honor," he said, "I'm a horticultural consultant. I've been a professional horticulturist for approximately twelve years and I've owned a plant nursery with a number of plants of great commercial and ethnobiological value. I have very extensive experience with orchids and with the asexual micropropagation of orchids under aseptic cultures." He paused for a moment and grinned. Then he glanced around the room and added, "Frankly, Your Honor, I'm probably the smartest person I know."
Continues...
Excerpted from The Orchid Thiefby Susan Orlean Copyright © 2002 by Susan Orlean. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B004QWZGWU
- Publisher : Ballantine Books
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : July 20, 2011
- Language : English
- File size : 2.7 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 370 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307795298
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,994 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Susan Orlean has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1992. She is the author of seven books, including 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 upstate New York and may be reached at SusanOrlean.com and Twitter.com/SusanOrlean.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book absorbing and well-written, particularly appreciating its engaging journey through orchid history and detailed botanical information. Moreover, the character development receives positive feedback, with customers describing it as a wonderful character study. However, the story quality and insight receive mixed reactions - while some find it full of interesting facts, others say it's not overly exciting. Additionally, several customers find the book boring and repetitive.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book fascinating and absorbing, with one mentioning it's particularly good for fans of orchids and Florida.
"A great read. It’s a tale of obsession. There are things one can fall in love with so deeply that their thrall never goes away...." Read more
"...being stolen in the strand, asked around work and heard it was a good read...." Read more
"Great read - inspired me to go to Homestead and shop for new orchids!!..." Read more
"Great book, and I now have quite the collection of orchids because I appreciate them so much more now!..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, finding it readable and well-crafted, with one customer specifically noting the beautiful descriptions of landscapes and orchids.
"...Well written...." Read more
"...The book is well written and moves along. I loved going into the swamps with the author knowing I wasn't the one having to muck along in the mud...." Read more
"A well-written and meticulously researched examination of the passion for new and unusual species of orchids, The Orchid Thief illuminates the power..." Read more
"I loved Susan Orleans style of writing and her descriptions of places, situations and people - she really brought it to life...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and informative about orchids, with detailed botanical information and an interesting journey through their history. One customer specifically mentions the ghost orchid of Florida as a highlight.
"...eludes easy characterization as it fascinates as accounts of history, botany, society, psychiatry and ecology...." Read more
"There’s not much of a story here but many stories, history and information about orchids...." Read more
"...book is an engaging journey through the history of orchids and orchid collecting as well as a revealing introduction to the often mysterious and..." Read more
"Fascinating history of the Orchid. Just have to overlook a little language problem. UWF keeps a copy in the Botany Section" Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, describing it as a wonderful character study filled with odd and extraordinarily interesting people.
"...Interesting characters appear every few pages: Snake Boy, frog poachers, Miss Seminole, Lee More the Adventurer, the Ghost Grader, Lord Mansfield,..." Read more
"...The characterization of Florida is very nice, and she describes people well...." Read more
"...The characters don't add a lot, but do provide a connective thread...." Read more
"...is very similar: a subject that is offbeat and interesting, full of odd characters and Ms. Orlean's diligent research combined with witty..." Read more
Customers praise the book's evocative writing style, with one customer noting how it paints a vivid mental picture, while another appreciates its deadpan tone.
"...has made itself irresistible." Orchids are "ancient, intricate living things that have adapted to every environment on earth." There are..." Read more
"...It was visceral and you might even say haunting in the most beautiful kind of way...." Read more
"...-- I loved "The Library Book," and this is very similar: a subject that is offbeat and interesting, full of odd characters and Ms. Orlean's diligent..." Read more
"...this book, I had a similar response: the writing is good, and details are amazing, including the dialogue of the characters Orlean brings to the page..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's insight, with some finding it insightful and educational covering multiple topics, while others find it too convoluted and not all information interesting.
"Informative - learned a lot about orchids - story not overly exciting" Read more
"Didn't hold my interest. Too fragmented and anecdotal. Didn't seem to hold together as either a novel or non-fiction" Read more
"...but for the most part an entertaining and informative read." Read more
"...On the other hand, the orchid information is pretty familiar stuff, and can get repetitious..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's story quality, with some finding it full of interesting facts and intriguing, while others find it not overly exciting and lacking a plot.
"Very interesting! It's one of those books that's hard to put down." Read more
"Didn't hold my interest. Too fragmented and anecdotal. Didn't seem to hold together as either a novel or non-fiction" Read more
"...I found this book, the Orchid Thief, I was amazed to learn it's a true story!..." Read more
"...Like "The Library Book," "The Orchid Thief" is intriguing and enchanting...." Read more
Customers find the book boring, repetitive, and distracting.
"I thought this book was very boring and very repetitive. I felt as if I kept ready the same thing over and over again. I was not at all interested...." Read more
"...hand, the orchid information is pretty familiar stuff, and can get repetitious..." Read more
"...This copy was severely marked up, underlined and written in, very distracting. The book itself is worth a read, excellent story." Read more
"...It got a bit repetitive and when I read the history, that the book evolved from the magazine article, I thought it probably made a better article..." Read more
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Wonderful historical romp about orchids and collectors
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2018I started my cymbidium orchid collection from buying orphan orchid plants from Lowe's and Home Depot. You know - the types of plants that nobody wants because they are past their bloom, but the plant is still green, fresh and alive. I wanted to learn more about the easier to grow orchid species. My mom had a gorgeous garden of cymbidium orchids in her backyard. It all started innocently enough - someone gave her a cymbidium orchid as a gift. She loved the huge, long-lasting sprays of orchids that the plant put out, and once it was past it's bloom, she didn't just chuck the plant into the garbage.
She was patient. She put it out under a tree, atop an old wood stump. She watered it and fed it with the special hot-pink orchid food she found at the grocery store. She pretty much ignored it except to water it every day. When she was too tired after a long day at work, I would water it for her. Not expecting anything to happen at all. But then one day - the dormant orchid plant sprouted three or four long spikes, and within days, those spikes exploded into an amazing spray of about 20 yellow cymbidium flowers!!!
It was a sight to see!
Me and my maw enjoyed those blooms for about 6 months, and the plant went dormant again. But this time, the bulbs of the orchid plant filled the terra cotta pot, so she divided the plant very carefully into two halves. She was careful to use special orchid soil for the plant, which contained alot of bark in it. She watered it pretty much every day. Wouldn't you know it? By the next bloom cycle, the two orchid plants grew 12 or 13 stalks between them, each stalk supporting 12 to 15 orchid flowers! Her garden was abloom with these exotic blossoms, and she was the talk of the block.
She sure had a green thumb!
At the time of her passing, she had about 20 cymbidium orchid plants in the yard - and my older sister took them all to her place. I wonder whatever happened to them? Alas - they are gone from this beautiful Earth!
Now I am raising my own brood of cymbidiums. I got bit by the gardening bug pretty bad a few years ago. At first it was with roses. I planted as many rose plants as I could find, mostly I bought them from the plant orphanages of Lowe's and Home Depot. It only takes about 2 months to get a plant turned around back to healthy. Then I went onto my new cymbidium orchid obsession.
I read all that I could about orchids in general, and that's what led me to this book; (copyright 1998.)
When I found this book, the Orchid Thief, I was amazed to learn it's a true story!
Author Susan Orlean is quite the wordsmith; she can weave such an intricate and unique story out of the Florida Swamp; in a real place known as the Fakahatchee Strand. She heard stories about this master orchid whisperer - a shady man who poached orchids from the Fakahatchee Swamp to clone and sell to the masses, and to make himself richer beyond all imagination. She traveled down to Florida in order to meet this outrageous man, named John Laroche. She wanted to do her own investigation, and she was familiar with Florida herself, having been raised there as a little girl. Laroche was a colorful, but unethical type of person. He had a different set of morals and values than the rest of society. But on the other hand - she found him to be as refreshing as a tall glass of sarsaparilla. He deeply loved all orchids; the pretty ones, the ugly ones, the hard- to -grow- ones he loved the most. He was a walking encyclopedia when it came to orchids, and he knew every person in the business of raising and selling orchids. He went to all the orchid shows. He was once a rising star in the orchid world, but then he exploited native american laws and some Seminole Indians in one of his schemes. She became obsessed a bit herself during this journey of writing her book. Orchids have a weird draw on people. They are mesmerizing, and spellbinding in beauty and unexpected shapes and colors. She was driven to tramp around the hot swamps of Florida to witness for herself one of the rarest orchids on Earth; the Polyrrhiza Lindenii, otherwise known as the Ghost Orchid. This orchid plant is not a standard plant at all; having no leaves. It is all roots and it attaches itself to a particular swamp tree for nourishment. It is not a parasite: it is a hanger-oner sort. It is very white, pure white, with four petals and a large lower lip, that has lateral attachments to the lip that flutter in the weakest of swamp breezes. It blooms for a short while, and it opens at night. I hear it has a beautiful, intoxicating fragrance to it.
People call it a ghost because it likes to grow in the darkest, shadiest parts of the swamp, and the stark white contrasting coloring of the orchid flower makes it stand out - ghost-like, in the middle of the fauna, moss and murky waters.
People go crazy for the wilder, rarest flowers!
Even this author went a bit crazy over orchids - she hiked into the deep and dangerous swamp to see a Ghost Orchid in bloom for herself, but alas - it was not to be.
I read this book and it ignited more of an obsession with orchids for me. I am going to stick with raising cymbidiums for now, but I also want to try a phalaenopsis orchid, (moth orchid), a cattelaya orchid, (corsage orchid), and maybe I'll even stick my neck out and try to grow a Oncidium orchid. But the last thing that I want to do is kill any orchid for my own selfish enjoyment.
I learned something valuable from this book, and that is never to waste anything that is precious from this earth. Orchids are mesmerizing; they are extremely diverse and very delicate flowers. None of them should be bought for ego, or for the sake of ownership.
Orchids should be brought into one's home for nurturing and enjoyment, and if treated properly, orchid plants will outlive their human owners!
I loved reading this book because I learned so much about shade houses, green houses and orchid collectors world-wide! It's easy to catch an orchid obsession, so reader beware!
After you get close to these exotic and impossibly fragile orchid plants, you will want to have a few in your home or your yard.
Start with the easy ones. See how you do with them.
And be sure to have an orchid sitter watch over them and water them if you plan on leaving your home on vacation.
I LOVED this book, and I want to keep learning more!!!!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2016In 1994, John Laroche and three Seminole Indian men, were caught leaving a Florida Wildlife Preserve with bags full of Ghost orchid (Polyrrhiza lindenii) specimens. They challenged the arrest on the basis of a law allowing Native tribes to violate the endangered species act. Susan Orleans, a columnist for The New Yorker went to Florida to get the story. She befriended the weirdly charismatic Laroche, gained entry to the bizarre world of orchid collectors, and ultimately expanded the article into a book (and subsequently a movie).
Ms. Orlean is as much part of this story as anyone else: she's there, she's experiencing this, and her thoughts and curiosity take us through lessons in history, evolution, geology, botany, and current orchid mania - the characters, the controversies, and the competition. Her style includes much wit and humor which makes for somewhat light reading and a few laugh out loud lines.
Front and center are orchids - "a jewel of a flower on a haystack of a plant" - so evolved and diversified they've become "the biggest flowering plant family on earth because each orchid species has made itself irresistible." Orchids are "ancient, intricate living things that have adapted to every environment on earth." There are tens of thousands of varieties, and more being created by natural as well as man-made hybridization virtually every day. Orchids often outlive human beings. In fact, orchids can theoretically live forever, since they have no natural enemies.
Orlean describes some extreme personalities of orchid people as an amusing side story. Some orchid owners designate a person as an "orchid heir" in their wills since the owners expect that their precious orchids will outlive them. Another reviewer commented: “This book will make you feel like the very picture of placid normalcy when compared to orchid growers.”
“Laroche loved orchids, but I came to believe he loved the difficulty and fatality of getting them almost as much as the flowers themselves.” Laroche is a kindred spirit of those fellow orchid hunters of the 19th century who rescued fragile flowers in the midst of an erupting volcano in the Phillipines and a revolution in Columbia. An orchid from Burma was auctioned off in London “still attached to the human skull on which it had been found.”
Southern Florida is an underlying theme. Many of us remember the famous land-scams of the 1950s and 60s. “ Florida land is elastic: you can make more of it.” (pg 122) Any dank Florida cypress swamp can be drained and remade… to look like a Tuscan village or an English town. Interesting characters appear every few pages: Snake Boy, frog poachers, Miss Seminole, Lee More the Adventurer, the Ghost Grader, Lord Mansfield, etc.
The Fakahatchee Swamp is home of many wild orchids, Orlean comments wryly when plunging into brackish water up to the waist, and having to toe around for submerged alligators on the squishy bottom, "I hate being in a swamp with machete-wielding convicts."
Indian rights and the Florida Seminole tribe and business interests are another side story. The legal similarities between Chief Billie and the panther and Laroche and the ghost orchids have a fine distinction.
But the orchids! My thoughts are like the authors: “It’s like an explosion in a paint factory…” The flowers are interesting but the plant looks dead. “These flowers are poetic.” They are all so different. This one is speckled. “Here’s a weird shape. Look at this long tube.” The variety is overwhelming.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2025This was purchased as a Mother's Day gift, but I don't remember how I first heard about this. I saw the film Adaptation which features this book in a way, and liked it, but it didn't blow my mind or anything.
Many moons later, I was browsing at a certain quirky used bookstore in ATX, and something about it called to me, and I was in the mood for something a little more oblique than my usual espionage/military studies.
I didn't know anything about the author or the book itself, but it's now among my favorite random book finds, and is definitely somewhere in my top 20.
It was visceral and you might even say haunting in the most beautiful kind of way. Conjures up a very primal, cinematic wildland and seriously made me want to move to Florida.
I'm probably not adding anything that hasn't been said, but anyone who enjoys the more entertaining types of eccenctricities or the rugged outdoors would likely enjoy it.
I don't know why but I never looked into any of Susan Orlean's other books, but I'm looking forward to doing so.
Top reviews from other countries
SafiaReviewed in Sweden on September 1, 20234.0 out of 5 stars Recommended
Arrived on time. Printing is a little off at the top.
Arrived on time. Printing is a little off at the top.4.0 out of 5 stars
SafiaRecommended
Reviewed in Sweden on September 1, 2023
Images in this review
Oz TuppyReviewed in Australia on May 23, 20154.0 out of 5 stars Everything you wanted to know about orchid hunters and their prey
A book that slowly draws you into the obsessive world of the orchid and those who will go to great lengths to own the perfect specimen. An enjoyable read.
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Nicte CiceroReviewed in Mexico on June 18, 20251.0 out of 5 stars UNA DE LAS RARAS VECES EN QUE LA PELÍCULA ES MEJOR QUE EL LIBRO
No me atrapó, solamente el incio es interesante cuando cuenta sobre la historia de las orquídeas, cómo las descubrieron los occidentales y cómo casi se las acaban. La parte del cuidado de las orquídeas también es muy interesante, el resto del libro muy pesado y aburrido.
Shashidhar sastryReviewed in India on September 8, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Makes an interesting and wonderful reading
KristinaReviewed in Canada on January 2, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Great read
Excellent and most interesting story






