"The Cactus Hunters takes us into the fascinating world of succulent collecting. Jared D. Margulies skillfully traces the consequential ways in which people and cacti move one another, remaking possibilities for life, desire, wealth, extinction, and more in the process. This book offers a powerful example of the value of close attention to the entangled lives of plants and their people."—Thom van Dooren, author of A World in a Shell: Snail Stories for a Time of Extinctions
"Follow Jared D. Margulies and his infectious curiosity on a riveting global tour starring charismatic cacti and the people who desire them. In moving plants and the unconscious to center stage, The Cactus Hunters is a deeply felt and nuanced reckoning with desire as a structurally produced and world-making force—a unique and major contribution to political ecology."—Rosemary Collard, author of Animal Traffic: Lively Capital in the Global Exotic Pet Trade
"An esoteric deep dive into the illegal cactus trade."—Publishers Weekly
"Through his extensive and well-articulated analytic framing, Margulies has produced a unique and important piece of literature that masterfully brings Lacanian psychoanalysis and political ecology into dialogue to provide a much-needed framework for understanding an overlooked aspect of anthropocentric environmental degradation."—Journal of Political Ecology
"The book is an interesting case study in the political ecology of desire and its impacts on global biodiversity conservation."—Choice Connect
"Landscape architects should find delight in this book—particularly in how it weaves together tales of plant hunting with nuanced psychoanalysis."—Landscape Architecture Magazine
"Even those highly versed in plant conservation can learn something from this book: it draws on gender theory, psychoanalysis, colonial histories, racial stereotyping, capitalist consumerism and political ecology to provide new and important insights into the trade of succulents."—Oryx
"The Cactus Hunters expands the scope of “emerging geographies (and anthropologies) of the Anthropocene” by recognising the capacity for dialogue in succulents and cacti."—The Sociological Review
"This book is well-organised, with a fluent concatenation of facts; the author shows a remarkable narrative capacity and great erudition. With this book, we understand how, as some plants symbolically take root in our desires, at the same time, they slowly unroot forever from their native soil."—Plant Perspectives
"Exceptionally informative as well as highly readable, [The Cactus Hunters] provides a rich context for contemplating the global movements of succulent plants – including the forces driving popular potted varieties to extinction in the wild – by moving beyond simply documenting botanical lives and deaths, and tapping into the unconscious desires of people whose lives come to be shaped by them."—Portland Press Herald