Chasing Lewiss Monkeyflower, Elizabeth Adelman
Chasing Lewiss Monkeyflower, Elizabeth Adelman
List: $20.99 | Sale: $14.70
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Chasing Lewis's Monkeyflower
The Amazing Afterlife of the Lewis and Clark Expedition's Wild Plants

Author: Elizabeth Adelman

Narrator: Holly Adams

Unabridged: 9 hr 40 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/17/2026


Synopsis

A look at the Lewis and Clark Expedition and the plant specimens the great explorers gathered on their way—and of their amazing afterlife.

Elizabeth Adelman's Chasing the Missing Monkeyflower is the two hundred-year saga of finding, losing, and finding the wild plants collected on America's first exploration west, the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

Thomas Jefferson handpicked Meriwether Lewis to lead the expedition, gather notable specimens along the way, and then write the journals, with one volume to include science-worthy descriptions and classifications of the plants that Lewis collected and pressed to preserve. Not a botanist, Lewis needed help to write this part of the journals.

Ambition, deceit, theft, wealth, debt, alcoholism, loss, suicide, serendipity, and stubborn persistence cross the plants' paths in Philadelphia, New York, and London. This is the first work detailing the places, practices, and times of a cavalcade of people who touched the plants. A fascinating chronicle of an unexplored byway of the great American story.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Dale on November 08, 2025

Overly detailed with little insight, this book is more a deep dive into the relationships of 19th century botanists than insight into the actual Lewis & Clark samples. Some chapters are almost a schedule of meetings and other correspondence that had little to do with the journey of the samples after......more

Goodreads review by Venneh on September 23, 2025

Neat hyperfixation nonfiction book on how the actual nuances and ecological motivations behind the Lewis and Clark expedition. The book goes out of its way to not really talk about the political and racial reasoning behind these, which does feel willfully blind to some degree, but this is primarily......more