Garden Fiction on Gardeners and Gardens
‘The Garden of Reading: An Anthology of Twentieth-century Short Fiction About Gardens and Gardeners’ edited by Michele Slung.
I was going to write about brochures, bulb and seed catalogues, but then I came across this book. At least the anthology collects works that set out to be fiction, whilst gardening brochures presumably did not.
On Brochures
- The best photographs you can imagine are used in brochures. So more flowers and better colours are visible than you may attain with your own plants.
- Printed brochures are subject to the skill and vagaries of the printer and his reproduction processes. Accurate colour matches can’t be guaranteed.
- Brochure side step, insect damage, weather problems and other trials and tribulations facing gardeners.
- It is a brochures job to put the best foot forward not talk you out of a purchase.
- So are Brochures fact or fiction – well I will read the Anthology whilst I make up my mind.
On the Anthology
‘….The twenty-four stories in The Garden of Reading comprise a diverse and unexpected collection but one that stays true to its central and harmonious theme. Included are Colette’s sensuous ‘Grape Harvest,’ David Gueterson’s poignant ‘The Flower Garden,’ Stephen King’s sinister ‘The Lawnmower Man,’ J.G. Ballard’s lovely and otherworldy ‘The Garden of Time,’ the ominous ‘Green Thoughts’ by John Collier, Rosamunde Pilcher’s touching and simply titled ‘The Tree,’ and the splendid ‘the Fig Tree, by V.S. Pritchett – as well as classics from such masters as Saki, Robert Graves, and Eudora Welty, and contemporary writing from the likes of Sandra Cisneros and Garrison Keillor. If you’ve ever nurtured a flower, a green plant, a tomato plant, or a gleam of imagination, there’s something in The Garden of Reading that is sure to delight.’ source amazon review.