Bookbot

Mirabel Osler

    Gartenbänke
    A Gentle Plea for Chaos
    The Secret Gardens of France
    • The Secret Gardens of France

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Mirabel Osler, author of A Gentle Plea for Chaos, presents an enchanting account of her travels through the French countryside in search of its most beautiful gardens. Accompanied by her daughter and granddaughter, she explores the hidden gems that contrast with the order and symmetry of famous sites like Versailles. These private gardens, rich in variety and individuality, reflect the unique visions of their creators. Osler believes that gardens offer each of us a chance to craft our personal paradises, and her journey reveals extraordinary spaces that would otherwise remain unseen. The narrative immerses readers in a vibrant tapestry of gardens designed for the senses, featuring a wild garden, a romantic island retreat, a rose garden with over 300 varieties, and a fragrant haven curated by a gardener with a keen sense of smell. The gardeners encountered throughout this journey are spirited and diverse, defying easy categorization. They embody a joyous sensibility that contrasts with the often serious tone of contemporary horticulture. From an 84-year-old marquise nurturing her vegetable garden by Lake Geneva to two septuagenarian brothers transforming their island fort with rare plants, each gardener and their garden share irresistible stories that celebrate the beauty and creativity found in personal landscapes.

      The Secret Gardens of France
      3,9
    • A Gentle Plea for Chaos

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      In this book the author describes the way her garden evolved and how, without meaning to do so, she let it take over her life. She suggests moving away from planning, regimentation and gardening with the mentality of a stamp-collector. Frequently funny and always stimulating, she writes of the alchemy of gardens, of the 19th-century plant-collectors and plant illustrators and of the gardening philosophers, all fertilizing great thoughts along with their hollyhocks. She won the 1988 Sinclair Consumer Press Garden Writer of the Year Award.

      A Gentle Plea for Chaos
      3,6