Nog een suggestie van Affie: Anne Scott James schrift brieven aan haar dochter over tuinieren. Tja, er waren nog geen blogs en e-mail.
Having reached "the creaky years," sic Scott-James ( Sissinghurst:
The Making of a Garden ) began recording her gardening life in a series
of letters to her daughter Clare, who was living nearby in the English
countryside and had just gotten started on a garden of her own. The
result is a comfortably British dialogue on gardening and the cycles of
life. Fathers and sons may show love by pondering how life imitates the
World Series; this mother and daughter do it by asking each other
earnestly, "How do you feel about dahlias?" As with gardening itself,
equal attention is paid to the practical ("An actively growing lawn
loses nine pints of water per square yard in a day") and the reflective
("I have to garden for myself alone, and I do not like it"). And, as
with nearly all mothers and daughters, there is conflict--between the
well-planned gardening style of Scott-James and the perceived wildness
of her daughter's schemes. For some readers, the tension between the two
women will be minor and the mental volleys precious, but for the
gardener who calls plants only by their Latin names, it will provide an
engaging break from weed guides. Hastings's intricate line drawings are
appropriately whimsical (From Publishers Weekly).

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