Description
About the Author
Margaret Willes is an enthusiastic gardener and the former publisher at the National Trust.
Reviews
'This is a wonderful book, and an unusual addition to the gardening shelf. It reveals the democracy of gardening and its being both a craft and an art - a mixture of hard labour and passion. Margaret Willes's book shows how people with no money and little time to themselves produced riches on small plots - little paradises, even. How begging, borrowing (and stealing), they would create wealths of flowers and food, and find joy in doing so. How gardening would become their chosen taskmaster - and their deliverer. Willes's history is a constant statement of how green fingers have transformed lives. The book is a delight.' - Ronald Blythe, author of Akenfield 'An encyclopaedic and enjoyable read, so well written and so informative that it should appeal to anyone interested in history and horticulture.' - Bob Flowerdew, regular panel member of BBC Radio 4's Gardeners' Question Time 'Garden historians characteristically focus on the gardens of grand houses and their makers. By contrast, this is an intriguing study of an often overlooked area of both horticultural and social history. Through dauntingly energetic research, Margaret Willes has produced a colourful and remarkably detailed account of how a passion for flower and vegetable gardening has enriched the lives of millions.' - Michael Leapman, author of One Man and His Plot
'...in this wonderfully rich study, Margaret Willes reveals the forgotten history of Britain's working-class horticulturalists'-PD Smith, the Guardian. -- P.D. Smith * The Guardian *
Book Information
ISBN 9780300212358
Author Margaret Willes
Format Paperback
Page Count 424
Imprint Yale University Press
Publisher Yale University Press
Weight(grams) 544g