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Kirkus Reviews (11/01/2012):
Reflections on being saved, and finding happiness, through gardening.
Early in the book, Roach (And I Shall Have Some Peace There, 2011, etc.)
includes a quote from Bertrand Russell: "Every time I talk to a savant I
feel quite sure that happiness is no longer a possibility. Yet when I
talk with my gardener, I'm convinced of the opposite." This conundrum
encapsulates this third book from Roach, a longtime blogger and former
editor for Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. From the descriptions
within, the author gardens in much the same way she writes--nothing is
turned away, provided there's a suitable space for it. Roach considers
the sounds of gardening, terminology, different pricings of what she
grows to sell, childhood gardens, the passing of seasons--both for a
garden and for a person--and the contributions of science toward the
creation of a more pleasing experience of garden tending. The author is
also unafraid of poking fun at herself and the many well-entrenched
habits of gardening she cannot back away from--for example, having spent
a lifetime gardening in long pants, she tried shorts only to relent
within the half-hour, feeling that she was doing a disservice to the
colors of the flowers with "the color of the canvas I provide with my
tender flesh." Roach scatters gardening tips throughout the book, noting
that other books provide more along those lines but that these tips are
shared in the interest of spurring on readers to return to their own
gardens. Many a gardener will likely find that motivation from this
pleasant book. COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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