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We make literary travel companions to cities, countries, and regions around the world. We aim to give even the armchair tourist a local’s understanding of each place: its rhythms, its customs, its contradictions, and the thousands of everyday details that make it tick. Place by place, a global literary atlas takes shape.

Our authors are chosen for both their intimate knowledge of their subject and their gifts as storytellers. Through their eyes, you’ll experience what it’s like not merely to visit a place but to live there, with the ideal combination of familiarity and wonderment.

Our books take the position that exploring the world remains one of life’s great and enduring pleasures, and that narrative is a great way to build empathy and privilege nuance: expanding what we notice and what we experience, what we carry back with us and what we leave behind.

Our name is borrowed from a species of palm native to the Amazon, Socratea exorrhiza: a tree that weaves its way through the forest in search of light, connecting its roots to those of other species, exchanging, nurturing, helping the forest grow. We aim to do the same thing by fostering something like an ethos of slow travel, creating space for curiosity, spontaneity, and unexpected connections.

Our project is international by nature. It first took root in Paris, where Nadia Krovnikoff and François Saugier founded the French imprint L’arbre qui marche, before finding its way to New York. It now reaches across Europe as well, with editions in Italian and Spanish. 

The team

Kristina Kearns is an award-winning publisher and literary arts consultant whose work spans independent publishing, literary nonprofits, and community-based literary access initiatives.

She has served as operations director of Fitzcarraldo Editions, executive and editorial director of McSweeney’s, founding director of the McSweeney’s Literary Arts Fund, and executive director of the arts festival and residency Twenty Summers.

She is also the founder of Ourshelves Lending Library, a nonprofit initiative that established free community libraries and literary programming in San Francisco shelters.

She lives in Paris with her family: two humans, one cat, and a fairly benevolent feline ghost.

Daniel Levin Becker is a writer, translator, and editor from Chicago. A founding editor of Fern Books, he was formerly reviews editor of The Believer, senior editor at McSweeney’s Publishing, and English editor at Éditions Odile Jacob.

He is the author of Many Subtle Channels: In Praise of Potential Literature and What’s Good: Notes on Rap and Language, and the translator of numerous works from French, including books by Georges Perec, Jakuta Alikavazovic, Éric Chevillard, and Laurent Mauvignier, whose novel The Birthday Party was longlisted for the International Booker Prize.

He has been a member of the Parisian literary collective Oulipo since 2009. He has no public stance on ghosts.