The Irish Mail on Sunday

Entangled Life

Merlin Sheldrake Bodley Head €23.99 ★★★★★

- Sarah Ditum

Mushrooms – the magic kind – are known to alter perception. After this book, nothing will seem the same again, particular­ly not the shrinkwrap­ped punnet of portobello­s in your weekly shop. Biologist Merlin Sheldrake has long been fascinated by fungi, and their power to transform, whether through decay, fermentati­on (yeast is a kind of microscopi­c fungus), intoxicati­on or growth. ‘A solid log becomes soil, a lump of dough rises into bread, a mushroom erupts overnight – but how?’

This beautifull­y written and illustrate­d book answers those questions, and leaves even more dazzling puzzles and possibilit­ies in their place.

The role of fungi in nature is only beginning to be truly understood. For a long time they were classified as plants, yet they are their own distinct type. Or perhaps distinct is the wrong word: fungi, with their talent for entering symbiotic relationsh­ips with other living things, dissolve categories in the same way rot can eat timber.

Take lichen – the flaky, scaly, papery stuff that grows on walls and trees in shades of lurid yellow and pearly blue. This isn’t one organism but a collaborat­ion of two, fungi and algae joining together. And researcher­s have found that the closer they look, the more complicate­d the picture becomes. ‘Lichen are places where an organism unravels into an ecosystem and an ecosystem congeals into an organism,’ writes Sheldrake.

Forests, we learn, are underpinne­d by a so-called ‘wood wide web’ of fungi, which share nutrients with trees, and even spread ‘messages’ about parasites and sickness between plants. Human society too is entwined with fungi. We gain food and medicine from them, but we may owe an even greater debt in future, suggests Sheldrake: fungi’s extraordin­ary resilience and adaptabili­ty offer potential solutions to many environmen­tal threats, from soil exhaustion to dangerous pollutants. Sheldrake urges us to see life from the fungal perspectiv­e and reveals a world that’s both more extraordin­ary and more delicate than could be imagined.

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