A Tryst with Nature talks  about the clear gap between nature as  known in the laboratory and nature as known in the diversity of natural  landscapes. Faced with this contradiction between two equally important and  necessary spaces, the key questions facing us now are:
      - What is the future of this contradiction? 
- What does harmony mean? 
- Of what significance is the nation-State in relation to these       questions? 
The author discusses two separate aspects of modern  life, one that embraces development and conservation as defined by a  colonial legacy of instrumental labour in a capitalist economy, and another  that embraces the economy of nature that is nourished by the reflexive labor of  the forest-dwelling tribes, expressed by the natural landscape water present in  all forms of life, for instance, in the universe of the forest.
  The book focuses on  people whose lives were not shaped by the vocabulary of modern social life. The  author discusses how the limited rights given to tribal people in policy  restrain their agency, taking the people out of the forest; deprives them of  their language; and clears the way for an unchecked flow of capital, exposing  tribal people to forces of economic development removed from all cultural  meaning.
  The book highlights  the importance of conservation and coexistence with all forms of nature.