To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Sitting in the Shade: A decade of my garden diary

Hardback

Main Details

Title Sitting in the Shade: A decade of my garden diary
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Hugh Johnson
Foreword by Alan Titchmarsh
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 220,Width 140
Category/GenreGardening
Gardens (descriptions, history etc)
ISBN/Barcode 9781784727079
ClassificationsDewey:635
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Octopus Publishing Group
Imprint Mitchell Beazley
Publication Date 1 April 2021
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Foreword by Alan Titchmarsh For more than 45 years Hugh Johnson has written Trad's Diary, delighting in recording his observations of his own garden, as well as many others, and of the wider natural world. Free to turn his attention to whatever is happening in that season, or simply something that piques his interest, his subjects are as diverse as the sounds of water, forest walks, the names of roses, the taste for shade he shares with Handel, the colours of autumn, the smell of rain, the private garden discovered within Beijing's Forbidden City or the first crocuses of spring. Month by month, Hugh shares with the reader through his easy, evocative writing an eclectic mix of thoughtful, topical and whimsical insights that will delight not only gardeners but anyone with an interest in nature in all its costumes.

Author Biography

Hugh Johnson is one of the world's pre-eminent writers on wine as well as an award-winning gardening writer. His previous gardening books include Trees, first published in 1973, The Principles of Gardening and Hugh Johnson in the Garden. Hugh started writing Trad's Diary as the editorial column of the RHS Journal when it was remodelled and relaunched as The Garden in 1975. He has been writing the diary ever since, since 2008 as a blog (www.tradsdiary.com).

Reviews

"More so than his wine books, this demonstrates Johnson's literary prowess and ability to capture a sense of place and nature, reviewing everything from the pace of growth in woods to changing hours of daylight, national tastes, and gardener's urges to plant. Gardeners will find this literary reflection engrossing, and fun to read."--Midwest Book Review