The Baron in the Trees
1957 • 217 pages

Ratings25

Average rating4.1

15

Cosimo di Rondó, a young adolescent, leads an insipid life as the older son of a minor noble in Italy during the time of Napoleon, subject to the tedious and idiosyncratic rules that govern the lives of all the upper classes. One night Cosimo rebels against his father's instruction to eat the snails served to him, and he strikes out into a tree, vowing never again to touch the earth.

And he doesn't. Instead, he creates a whole new big life for himself, living in the trees, looking out on the world from a vantage point above everything else, considering the world, choosing for himself how he wants to use his time, engaging in adventures with pirates and revolutionaries, reading and discussing important issues with the great minds of his day, romancing women, leading people, all the while finding ways to do all of these things while remaining true to his principle of remaining aloft.

It's a modern fairy tale. It's a Utopia that Cosimo creates for himself. It's a parable. It's a children's story. It's an adventure tale. It's charming and it's clever and it's compelling and it's wise.

A delight.

November 16, 2021Report this review