Cutting down a tree is sometimes necessary and sometimes not. But what about when the act seems cruel? Is it a crime? What kind of crime? What’s the worth of a tree—and of that tree’s meaning to a country? If these questions seem weighty, trust that Rosa Lyster’s fascinating Harper’s feature about a trial that explores them is anything but. Absurdity leavens the proceedings, and the result is one of the most surprising (and enjoyable) pieces I’ve read this year.

Given the public fervor about the case, the state’s decision about how to handle it should not have been a surprise. I was, nevertheless, surprised. A senior High Court judge, Justice Christina Lambert, had been appointed—High Court judges deal with only the most serious and complicated trials in England and Wales. Many of Lambert’s recent cases have involved grave crimes, of the sort that society considers unthinkable. In 2024, she was one of three senior judges appointed to consider the appeal of Lucy Letby, the pediatric nurse convicted of the murder of seven babies. The year before, Lambert had jailed a father for killing his two-month-old son. Richard Wright, the prosecutor appointed in the Sycamore Gap trial, had argued at least two cases before Lambert in the recent past. One involved the rape and murder of a young woman, the other the abduction and murder of a seven-year-old girl. Even at the start of the trial, there was talk of a prison sentence if the two men were found guilty. According to Sarah Dodd, the tree lawyer, it would be the first time anyone in the United Kingdom had gone to prison for cutting down a single tree.

More picks about trees

Becoming Earth

Robin Wall Kimmerer | Emergence Magazine | June 26, 2025 | 3,075 words

“But here the line is blurred. In the afterlife of cedars, nothing is ever dead.”

The Tree of Life Is Falling Down

Allison Williams | Seattle Met | July 2, 2025 | 2,391 words

“How one death-defying spruce became the mascot, tourist trap, and spiritual center of the Washington coast.”

How To Build A Thousand-Year-Old Tree

Matthew Ponsford | Noēma | March 6, 2025 | 4,227 words

“A set of experimental techniques and technologies that might seem harmful to trees is actually helping ancient forests survive.”

Secrets of the Christmas Trade

Owen Long | Curbed in partnership with Epic Magazine | December 7, 2022 | 6,374 words

“Turf wars. Protection money. Scientology. And my boss, a man who’s half-convinced he really is Santa.”