The Writer's Garden: How gardens inspired our best-loved authors

[Jackie Bennett] ✓ The Writers Garden: How gardens inspired our best-loved authors é Read Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Writers Garden: How gardens inspired our best-loved authors Writers and their Gardens J I have enjoyed these writers throughout my life and to read about how their gardens add to their lives and their writings. It was a peek inside their garden walls which I found lovely.. I loved it. bc Beautifully writing and photography.. Beautiful pictures with interesting stories about each garden/writer Susan Kline Great book]

The Writer's Garden: How gardens inspired our best-loved authors

Author :
Rating : 4.43 (536 Votes)
Asin : 0711238405
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 176 Pages
Publish Date : 2016-04-02
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

Writers and their Gardens J I have enjoyed these writers throughout my life and to read about how their gardens add to their lives and their writings. It was a peek inside their garden walls which I found lovely.. I loved it. bc Beautifully writing and photography.. Beautiful pictures with interesting stories about each garden/writer Susan Kline Great book

VERDICT A rare treat for both ardent fans of the individual writers and armchair enthusiasts of English gardening - Library Journal. "Bennett also provides fascinating information as to which of the author's books were written while they were in residence at a particular outdoor space, and a useful appendix supplies practical details on visiting the gardens. The icing on this sumptuous literary cake is Hanson's spectacular photographs, which will instantly transport readers to the verdant paradises so lovingly described by Bennett

Great things happen in gardens. And where would Jane Austen have been if she had never seen a 'walk', an ornamental lake, or a wilderness?Gardens hold a special place in many author's lives. For Beatrix Potter, Hill Top house was made possible by the new found freedom and wealth that a literary career can bring; for Sir Walter Scott, laying out his garden at Abbotsford was a way of distracting himself from mounting debts.In this book of 18 gardens and 20 writers, the author examines how the poet, writer, novelist derived a creative spirit from their private garden, how they tended and enjoyed their gardens, and how they managed their outdoor space.Jane Austen at Godmersham and ChawtonRupert Brooke at GrantchesterJohn Ruskin at BrantwoodAgatha Christie at GreenwayBeatrix Potter at Hill TopRoald Dahl at Gipsy HouseCharles Dickens at Gad's Hill PlaceVirginia Woolf at Monk's HouseWinston Churchill at ChartwellLaurence Sterne at Shandy HallGeorge Bernard Shaw at Shaw's CornerTed Hughes at Lumb BankHenry James followed by E.F. Benson at Lamb HouseJohn Clare at HelpstonThomas Hardy at Hardy's Cottage and Max GateRobert Burns at EllislandWilliam Wordsworth at Cockermouth and GrasmereWalter Scott at AbbotsfordRudyard Kipling at Bateman's. No one can doubt the importance of the garden in Roald Dahl's life as it was here where he worked, and here that he created James and the Giant P

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