¶ … Human Croquet by Kate Atkinson [...] importance of trees in the novel. While this novel chronicles the life of Isobel Fairfax, trees form the very roots of the novel, just as they form the root of all existence. Trees endure long after people have lived and died, as this novel clearly shows. Trees have also played a vital role in life since the very beginnings of time, as this novel illustrates. Trees are as much a part of life as breathing, and in this novel, they form the setting for some magical circumstances and fairy-tale qualities.
Throughout this quirky novel, the author refers to trees, and the importance they play in our lives. In fact, she even equates the heroine, Isobel, to a tree. She writes, "My body a trunk, my feet taproots, my toes probing like pale little moles through the dark soil. My head a crown of leaves growing towards the light" (Atkinson 25). The novel uses trees as symbols of life, and as symbols of death, for the forests are forever disappearing. Isobel lives on a street named for a tree and lined with trees. Trees are present everywhere in the book; so much so that the reader begins to take them for granted, just as people take them for granted every day. The trees symbolize everything missing in modern life, and how people take the most common things for granted, never thinking that one day they will disappear.
In addition to the symbols the trees represent, the author's description of trees throughout the novel also adds a sense of unreality and strangeness to the book. Many...
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