
My copy of
Green Thoughts finally arrived from my library co-op two weeks ago. It's a modest looking little book. You get the sense from the cover (I had a 2002 edition) with its demure-looking botanical drawing, that this is a gentle, pleasant little read. What you find instead is one of the most enthusiastic, opinionated, in-depth treatises on gardening I've ever read.
Perenyi had me from the closing lines of her foreword, in which she states:
"As I look about me, I have reason to believe I belong to a vanishing species. Gardens like mine, which go by the unpleasing name of 'labor intensive,' are on their way out and before they go, I would like to contribute my penny's worth to their history."
I would love to believe, 26 years after the publication of
Green Thoughts, that we organic, 'labor intensive' gardeners are merely ahead of the curve; that the rest of the world is on the verge of seeing the folly of waging chemical warfare on the garden and will be joining us momentarily. As much as I'd like to believe that, the fact of the matter is that I'm the only one in my immediate neighborhood with a compost pile. My neighbors and family don't understand why I don't just whip out the ol' Weed-n-Feed to make my grass look perfect, and, while we're at it, why the hell do I let my lawn turn brown every summer?
Besides her devotion to organic gardening, her obvious enthusiasm, and strong opinions about all matters regarding gardening, the thing that drew me most strongly to Perenyi's writing is her ability to tie gardening into the very heart of our culture. Throughout the book, she makes connections between gardening and a wealth of other disciplines, including history, art, politics, the environment, and women's rights. I've said before that for those of us who find bliss digging in the soil, gardening becomes so much more than just plunking plants in dirt and watching them grow. It becomes our love, our religion, our meditation, and, eventually, the filter through which we view the rest of the world. It is obviously so for Perenyi. That much is abundantly clear throughout
Green Thoughts.
I was reading
Kris from Blithewold's excellent review of
Green Thoughts yesterday. Kris states that she thinks Perenyi would have fit in perfectly with the garden blogging community. I couldn't agree more. The same passion and intelligence that I loved in
Green Thoughts are mirrored every day in the postings of my favorite garden bloggers. We are nothing if not opinionated and passionate!
Finally, I was pleased to find Perenyi as wonderfully quotable as our good friend Henry Mitchell. A few gems from
Green Thoughts:
"You can't work among plants for long and remain altogether an unbeliever: it is too obvious that
something is going on."
"I can't resist them (asters, in this case) and invariably let optimism get the better of judgment, which come to think of it may be the first principle of gardening."
"It takes a while to grasp that a garden isn't a testing ground for character and to stop asking, what did I do wrong?"
Thanks, Carol, for organizing all of us garden bloggers. Knowing that so many others are reading Green Thoughts made the reading even more enjoyable!
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Thursday, November 29. 2007 at 21:49 (Link) (Reply)
The virtual meeting club post will be up late tomorrow.
Carol, May Dreams Gardens
Hi Carol---I hide mine, too. I have some neighbors who are positive that my compost was attracting rats. It was the main reason we put up a privacy fence. Can't wait to read what everyone else has to say!
Thursday, November 29. 2007 at 22:18 (Link) (Reply)
Wonderful review, Colleen. This makes me wish I'd played long with the book review this month--here I was thinking that Perenyi wouldn't be so exciting!
Thanks, Kim! I've definitely got the first principle down, as well---looking at all of the seeds in my seed box that I'm planning to wintersow is definitely an exercise in optimism
Friday, November 30. 2007 at 17:58 (Link) (Reply)
Saturday, December 1. 2007 at 00:45 (Link) (Reply)
Can you imagine being able to write so well. Ahh.
She is still alive and gardening - I wonder if there is any way to contact her and ask her what she thinks now.
Welcome, Martha! Wouldn't that be wonderful? Especially when you consider that she was really ahead of the curve on so many things--like the homogenization of seed stocks and the potential disastrous impact it could have worldwide. We still have that issue, plus the constant debate about GE seed. That is one conversation I'd love to have. Thanks so much for stopping by!
Sunday, December 2. 2007 at 15:46 (Link) (Reply)
I wondered too how it all came about. It has to be something like that....I can't imagine anyone being able to just sit down and come up with all of that in a matter of a few months, or even a couple years. The book gave me the impression that Perenyi had been pondering many of the issues in the book for a very long time. It was a fascinating read, for sure!
Tuesday, December 4. 2007 at 18:55 (Link) (Reply)
Wednesday, December 5. 2007 at 09:11 (Link) (Reply)
Wednesday, December 5. 2007 at 21:03 (Link) (Reply)
The sociological aspects were one reason I was so drawn to her back in the 1980's - and things have not become perfect since then, have they!
I see that you have the newer edition with the flowers on the front cover - if you'd like to see the illustration of the maple tree carved into an outdoor feature [described in the chapter on Tree houses], I've put an enlarged version on my 'extra' blog, Annie's Addendum, so readers can see the engraving that she was talking about.
http://anniesaddendum.blogspot.com/
Annie at the Transplantable Rose