Request this memoir!!!
Following a restless childhood and adolescence in the affluent Chicago
suburb of Winnetka, Nolan and her boyfriend set off for the Southwest as
soon as she graduated from high school in 1987, ultimately landing at
the Zendik Farm, a hippie commune. Nolan spent over a decade in this
idiosyncratically controlled environment in which free love was
encouraged, but close relationships weren't. She and her young daughter
(whom she had with a friend at the commune) ultimately left the nomadic
commune, returning home to live with her parents and to nurse her wounds
and figure out her next steps. Realizing that her organic gardening
skills could be useful, Nolan established the Organic Gardner, a company
whose aim is to teach clients how to grow organic vegetables in their
own gardens. The concept caught on, and she soon found herself with a
rapidly growing company. The narrative thread about her experiences as
an organic entrepreneur is told in conjunction with the stories of her
courtship with a fellow Zendik resident whom she eventually married, her
creation of the 5,000 sq. ft. Edible Gardens at Chicago's Lincoln Park
Zoo, and her efforts to repair her fractured relationship with her
immediate family. These episodes, along with flashbacks to the commune,
make for a disjointed read, but Nolan's enthusiasm for bettering the
world is charming and infectious.
Publishers Weekly (05/06/2013)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment