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One Leaf, One Life

One Leaf, One Life is a meditative blend of botanical art, memoir, science, and spiritual reflection, built around Ramiro F. Prudencio’s colored pencil portraits of autumn leaves and the essays they awaken in him. A retired urologist born in Bolivia and shaped by immigration, medicine, loss, aging, family, and art, Prudencio turns each leaf into a small threshold: into photosynthesis and color theory, into memories of Chicago autumns, into his childhood injury that cost him an eye, into his late discovery of colored pencils, into gratitude for the ordinary green machinery that lets us breathe.

What moved me most is how earnestly the book believes in attention. Prudencio doesn’t glance at a leaf, he almost courts it. A maple becomes a dancer, an elm becomes a question mark asking Quo vadis?, an artichoke rises like an “emperor thistle” dressed for coronation. That often feels tender and earned, especially because the author’s own life is folded into the observation. When he writes about losing an eye at five, and then later about learning to see inward, the metaphor of the leaf stops being decorative. It becomes personal. I felt that same quiet force in the story of his grandson bringing him leaves by color until he finally presents one as “a rainbow.” It’s a small scene, but it contains the whole book’s heartbeat, wonder passed between generations, and nature translated through affection.

The writing is at its best when it lets precision and feeling breathe together. I enjoyed the way Prudencio can move from chlorophyll, electromagnetic waves, and the xylem’s slow upward pull of water into something almost prayerful without seeming embarrassed by either science or awe. His background as a surgeon gives the book a steady hand. He loves process, tools, discipline, and the almost surgical patience of burnishing pigment into paper. There’s a genuine soulfulness here, and the repetition of certain ideas, aging, humility, service, purpose, gradually begins to feel less like insistence and more like a ritual.

The book feels beautifully made, with a level of craftsmanship that matches the patience of the artwork itself. The cover is elegant and inviting, the layout gives the leaf portraits room to breathe, and the production has a gallery-like polish that makes the reading experience feel contemplative. I also found the author’s training in ikebana especially distinctive, because it gives the book a sensibility that goes beyond botanical illustration. There’s a disciplined attention to line, balance, emptiness, and natural form that seems to shape the images and the way he thinks about aging, beauty, and impermanence.

By the end, I felt I had read not a conventional art book, and not exactly a memoir, but a late-life testament written by someone trying to make peace with time without surrendering curiosity. Its loveliest idea is that decline can still be radiant, that what is scarred, curled, spotted, or nearly spent may be carrying its deepest beauty at the very moment we’re trained to overlook it. I closed the book feeling calmer, a little more awake to the living world, and more grateful for small, perishable things. I’d recommend One Leaf, One Life to reflective readers, nature lovers, artists, retirees, caregivers, and anyone drawn to books that turn close observation into a gentle philosophy of living.

Pages: 169 | ‎ ISBN : 978-9917032519

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