Arguably our greatest living nature writer delivers a characteristically thoughtful and erudite meditation on the battle for supremacy in our gardens, between humans who are convinced of their innate superiority and other organisms quietly going about their vital business.
We regard gardens as our personal dominions, where we can create whatever worlds we desire. But they are also occupied by myriads of other organisms, all with their own lives to lead. The conflict between these two power bases, Richard Mabey suggests, is a microcosm of what is happening in the larger world.
In this provocative book, rooted in the daily dramas of his own Norfolk garden, Mabey offers a different scenario, where nature becomes an equal partner, a 'gardener' itself. Against a background of disordered seasons he watches his 'accidental' garden reorganising itself. Ants sow cowslip seeds in the parched grass. Moorhens take to nesting in trees. A spectacular self-seeded rose springs up in the gravel. The garden becomes a place of cultural and ecological fusion, and perhaps a metaphor for the troubled planet.
This is vintage Mabey, maverick, intensely observed, and written with an unquenchable sense of wonder.
Publisher: Profile Books Ltd
ISBN: 9781805220701
Number of pages: 176
Dimensions: 202 x 132 x 20 mm
Weight: 254 g
Language: English
Edition: Main
[The] literary grandee of natural history ... here, we find the great man on home territory mingling observations on the shifting boundaries between garden and countryside with reminiscences of younger days and changing attitudes - Country Life
Absolutely enchanting ... With wisdom, wit, erudition and modesty, Mabey explores the edgeland between cultivation and wildness - Isabella Tree, author, Wilding
Delightful ... Richard Mabey is the doyen of UK nature writing - New Statesman
A discursive, philosophical memoir about everything from the human desire to shape nature to what Mabey calls the ambiguous experience of gardening in the midst of an environmental emergency - Financial Times
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