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The Accidental Garden: Gardens, Wilderness, and the Space In Between
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About This Book
An erudite but intimate work of horticultural memoir and philosophy by one of Britain's greatest living nature writers, who sees his garden as a sort of microcosm of the wider planet—a planet we desperately need to learn how to live on without causing further harm. The Accidental Garden helps show us the way.What is a garden? Must it be an arena for the display of human mastery or might it be something less determined, more generous, a handshake with nature rather than a clenched fist? These are questions that Richard Mabey, arguably England's greatest nature writer, asks and considers in his new book, part memoir, part treatise.From the pressing surrounds of the inventive, half-wild garden that Mabey, an instinctive rewilder, and his partner Polly, a determined grower, have shared for two decades, Mabey weighs past hopes and visions against the environmental emergency of the present. In beeches and bush crickets he sees proof of adaptation and survival; in commons and meadows he finds natural processes at work yet.A wise and witty stylist, under no illusions but attuned to delight, Mabey locates in his small patch of planet a place to test assumptions, to inhabit other species' sensoriums, to observe how myriad species establish common ground. "Be interpreters, scribes, witnesses, neighbors," urges Mabey, "the welcomers at the gate."
Reviews
"Mabey offers a portrait of a landscape that proves resilient in the face of a warming world, and each habitat on his property offers its own insights ..."
"The Accidental Garden contains such things as an enchanting meditation on varieties of roses, a foray into the history of the enclosure movement and a discussion of the moral permissibility of importing non-native plants ..."
"The author's schemes of observation are immersive."
"We have a few chapters of thoughtful environmental rambles before Mabey gets down to the nitty gritty of how, exactly, he and Polly faced their plot."
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