The Pursuit of Paradise by Jane Brown

The Pursuit of Paradise cover

I think it must be a few years since I bought The Pursuit of Paradise – A Social History of Gardens and Gardening by Jane Brown. I wasn’t really too sure what to expect of it. Sometimes gardening books are a bit like ‘teaching granny to suck eggs’, not that I think I know everything about the subject, but as I’ve been gardening since I was a wee girl, over fifty years!! – it’s inevitable that you pick up a lot of information one way and another.

But this book was informative, it has eleven chapters:
1. The Purest of Human Pleasure
2. The Secret Garden
3. The Military Garden
4. Emancipated Gardeners
5. The Rise of the Small Garden
6. Acquiring Eden
7. Science Lends a Hand
8. It’s Clever, but is it Art?
9. Labour of Love
10. The Formative Garden
11. Future Gardens

I found The Military Garden most interesting as it hadn’t dawned on me that so many gardening terms come from the arts of warfare – cordon, earthing-up, trench, bastion, palisade, covered way and more. It seems that when generals were at a loose end after wars were won, they went home and started to plan gardens where they could keep everything under control, just as they had commanded their men. All that topiary stood in for regiments of men!

This one is definitely worth reading if you enjoy social history and gardening.

A Passion for Gardening by Twigs Way

A Passion for Gardening by Twigs Way is subtitled How the British Became a Nation of Gardeners.

I enjoyed looking at this book as much as reading it as it’s full of lovely old photographs of people standing proudly in their gardens, and old adverts from gardening magazines. It’s a great glimpse back in time to the beginning of plant life on this island of ours, which is to say there were very few plants indeed. Each band of invaders or settlers added more plants along the way, some more welcome than others.

I was interested to learn that weeding was one of the few ways that 16th century women could earn some money outside their home. They apparently had metal tipped gloves to help them in their task. Why don’t we have such things nowadays? I rarely bother with gloves as I like to get stuck in to the earth but sometimes I do wear them, especially if I know I’m going to be socialising soonish after my gardening stint, because people don’t half give you hard looks when they see that your nails are full of muck and the skin on your thumb and forefinger is manky black, despite scrubbing like crazy.

Anyway, this book has a foreword by Joe Swift, one of the more likeable gardening experts of this era’s crop of pundits. I still miss lovely old Geoff Hamilton.

If you want to get a glimpse inside the book you can do so here.

This is the first book by the author Twigs Way which I have read but she is apparently a gardening historian and has published quite a few books on the subject. I was disappointed that although the subtitle is How the British Became a Nation of Gardeners, the book contents concentrate almost completely on England. It is only when you get very close to the end of the book that there are a couple of lines which mention that some Scots had contributed to horticulture but had migrated to England.

Much was made of the Yellow Book National Gardens Scheme which is an England/Wales charity, but there was no mention of Scotland’s Gardens Scheme a charity which has been going since 1931 which you can read about here.

Considering that whole books have been written about Scotland’s plant hunters, there were so many famous ones, and that in the past it seems that almost all the big estates in England were ruled by Scottish head gardeners it seems odd that a book on gardening history is so remiss. From what I’ve read in the past Scots seem to have cornered the market in gardening, not unlike the way Scottish nannies did for childcare.