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Hardcover Gardening in Eden: The Joys of Planning and Tending a Garden Book

ISBN: 0743241800

ISBN13: 9780743241809

Gardening in Eden: The Joys of Planning and Tending a Garden

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

"Though an old man," Thomas Jefferson wrote at Monticello, "I am but a young gardener." Every gardener is. In Gardening in Eden, we enter Arthur Vanderbilt's small enchanted world of the garden, where... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great Reading After a Long Day in Garden

I love to garden. I can't get enough. But when there's too much sun or too much rain, I usually pass my time reading a good book. Recently, I came upon "Gardening in Eden" by this young author from my own home state. What a pleasure. Get a copy and read it after a long day in your garden. You'll find yourself appreciating your garden 10 times more!

A Gem of a Book for the Gardener in Everyone!

As an amateur gardener myself, Mr. Vanderbilt's book hit home with me. From going to the local nursery to the smell of freshly mowed grass to the lonliness of winter this book expresses the multitude of emotions gardeners experience throughout the year. A very delightful book! This is one book that will be reread by.

Winter Tonic for the Gardener

I read Arthur T. Vanderbilt's book, "Gardening in Eden" as a nor'easter raged outside, blasting our house with a vile wintry mix, and his book brought inside the wonderfully soothing world of the garden in all seasons. With a roaring fire and a hot cup of tea, it was the perfect way to forget the storm and to remember how much fun it is to work outside. Now, I can't wait to get out there again!

Quiet Wisdom and Lyrical Beauty

Did you every really look at the New York Times Best Sellers List, the Nonfiction List? The 16 books on it are almost all always by celebrities, about celebrities, people or events in today's headlines, books that come and go in a flash. Books like Gardening in Eden by Arthur Vanderbilt will never make it onto the List. They don't stand a chance. And that's a shame, for in this small book I got for Christmas (its just 189 pages long) is so much quiet wisdom, such humor, such lyrical beauty and fine writing that I wish more people knew about it. In the simple setting of a garden the author finds the world and shares that exuberant joy on every page. I would highly recommend this book. My guess is that when today's current crop of bestsellers are forgotten, Gardening in Eden will still be a perennial classic.

LYRICAL

This summer has finally offered me up enough time to read and savor GARDENING IN EDEN--and it's a book I loved. It is wonderfully written: filled with poetry and lyricism--flights of soaring imagination--and all grounded with a great deal of humor. I think writing well about nature is difficult; nature writing can drift dangerously into Joyce-Kilmer land ("a nest of robins in her hair") but the great joy of GARDENING IN EDEN is that Mr. Vanderbilt manages to find the poetry, the God, the spirit, the timelessness, the eternity of nature--and never once does he slosh into sentimentality or Hallmark-ism. One of the things I like best about the book is that it's about gardening in the way Saint Exupery's WIND, SAND, AND STARS is about airplane flying--that is, the gardening is a prism or a window into something larger--something profound and often stirring. The description of spring which begins on page 38 and which explodes in glory through page 41 is a glorious, dizzying, delirious piece of writing: wonderful in the same way that Dylan Thomas's prose poems can take an aggregate of detail and pile them one on top of each other until the reader is overwhelmed and transported. And what beautiful visual detail: like perfect snapshots: "a red wheelbarrow without a scratch." The book is filled with sensory details like this: the smell of a newly opened grass-seed, "its dazzling yellow lights up the area outside my window...the leaves are that electric." I like, also, the way book effortless and seamlessly melts through time: suddenly we're children dreaming of a snow day--and then it's thirty years later we're in an office planning a garden during a tedious business meeting ("flexibility"). The seasons melt into each other; and time crosscuts through the decades. This seems to me exactly the way the world feels--but it's a tough thing to capture in art. Mr. Vanderbilt pulls it off magnificently. It's a rare and beautiful book.
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