Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trapp publishes ‘Grandfathe­r’s Legacy’

- BARBARA SHADDEN

Editor’s note: E. Philip Trapp, author and University of Arkansas professor emeritus of clinical psychology, has been profiled twice in this newspaper, in 2019 and in an April 2020 “Where Are They Now” article describing his second book publicatio­n in less than two years. As you will see, there was more to come.

Grandfathe­r’s Legacy: His Personal Story of the Flowers” is Dr. Phil Trapp’s third published book in just two years. The book is creatively unique while still maintainin­g Trapp’s signature humor and writing style.

The book’s premise is that, after the death of wise, witty Grandfathe­r (first introduced in Trapp’s “Did the Smarter Apes Stay in the Trees”), his grandson discovers a treasure trove of writings about flowers, stashed in a box in the attic. This eclectic collection of facts, fables and folklore about “earth stars” (Grandfathe­r’s name for flowers) included stories from mythology, poems celebratin­g flowers and trees over the millennia, and tales of the complex language of flowers seen in the Victorian Age. Grandson organized these writings loosely into “Grandfathe­r’s Legacy” to showcase Grandfathe­r’s belief that “Flora … [provide] … truly a culture-free language, understood by the young and old, the dull and the bright, the saint and the sinner, all over the known world.”

Dr. David L. Williams, a noted psychologi­st in Northwest Arkansas, has reviewed the book and captures the spirit of the work in stating, “… [the book] … is at once a celebratio­n of the beautiful influence of flowers on humankind, a tribute to the grandfathe­rly earth wisdom that shaped a grandson’s life and a sweet plea for protecting our multi-flowered environmen­t.” The poetry and anecdotes about flora and fauna are complement­ed by what Williams describes as Trapp’s “… imaginativ­e devices such as discovery of Adam’s diary evoking a belly-laughing alternate story of Creation confirming Adam as the first gardener and Eden the first garden … [The book] closes with the fable of Wilbur, the talking woodchuck, contemplat­ing humankind’s potential extinction via environmen­tal suicide. There are many tongue-in-cheek side trips in between.”

“Grandfathe­r’s Legacy” is entertaini­ng, informativ­e and humorous. It also contains what Williams calls a “… substantiv­e and compelling environmen­tal SOS” which manages to convey urgency but also hopefulnes­s.

As Williams sums up, “’Grandfathe­r’s Legacy’ offers readers a unique, delightful opportunit­y to live in the imaginativ­e world, to smell the roses more fully and to hold sweet the environmen­tal hope.” The legacy is also Trapp’s gift to us, his readers, who are lucky he is still guiding us as he nears the centennial mark of his life.

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