“From its evocative title and elegiac prose to its thoughtful analysis, The Orchard in the Ruins offers a measured yet hopeful study of how humans might live amidst political and environmental wreckage. Taking oranges as the subject of historical attention and ranging from the Global South to Southern California, Saraiva explores how these citrus fruits were cloned, cultivated, and commodified. Along the way, we see how these fragrant orchards were rooted—often on the grounds of previous plantations—amidst violent histories of race, imperialism, and capitalism and yet convey lessons for present-day social and ecological resilience.”