'Gardening, then, is a practice of sustained noticing . . .'
Outdoor space is something everyone should have access to. But you don't need a garden to become a gardener.
Growing plants and vegetables forces us to pause, pay attention and look more closely. From the vantage point of even the smallest windowsill garden we can observe the passing of time through the shifting of the seasons, as well as the environmental changes the planet is undergoing.
In this collection of essays, fourteen writers go beyond simply considering a plot of soil to explore how gardening is a shared language, an opportunity for connection, something that is always evolving. Penelope Lively trains her gardening eye on her gardens past and present; Paul Mendez reflects on the image of the paradisal garden; Jon Day asks whether an urban community garden can be a radical place; and Victoria Adukwei Bulley considers the power of herbs and why there is no such thing as a weed.
A collection about gardening unlike any other, In the Garden brings together fourteen brilliant writers to interrogate what is most important and pressing about growing today.
121 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2021
Publication year
2021
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Impressions

  • yairachiquinquirab25828shared an impressionlast year
    👍Worth reading

    Me gusto es algo raro

  • maiteculajay476shared an impressionlast year
    👎Give This a Miss

    Ni se

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    👎Give This a Miss

    Oye q no me entero

Quotes

  • Mora Beccar Varelahas quoted5 days ago
    I shall never have the garden I have in my mind, but that for me is the joy of it; certain things can never be realised and so all the more reason to attempt them. A garden, no matter how good it is, must never completely satisfy. The world as we know it, after all, began in a very good garden, a completely satisfying garden – Paradise – but after a while the owner and the occupants wanted more.
  • Mora Beccar Varelahas quoted5 days ago
    ut in the end I came to know how to grow the things I like to grow through looking – at other people’s gardens. I imagine they 27acquired knowledge of such things in much the same way – looking and looking at somebody else’s garden.
  • Mora Beccar Varelahas quoted5 days ago
    Memory is a gardener’s real palette; memory as it summons up the past, memory as it shapes the present, memory as it dictates the future

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