Mr. Graham recounts his tale with considerable verve and a vast erudition in the history of gardening and the arts generally…. Among much else, Mr. Graham shows us that the history of how our nation grew can be found in what it has grown.” — John Steele Gordon, Wall Street Journal
“We are what we plant, L.A.-based writer Wade Graham posits in his history of gardens. When he isn’t explaining the economic and cultural influences, he crafts fascinating profiles…. An engaging look at our own pieces of paradise.” — Ann Herold, Los Angeles Magazine
“A shrewd, comprehensive and often entertaining guide…. Sure to be a scholarly as well as popular resource for years to come…. And its illustrations and photos tour of some of the world’s most ravishing gardens.” — Tricia Springstubb, Cleveland Plain Dealer
“The most comprehensive and readable history ever written about the men and women who created the environments in which we now live…. will change the way you look not only at gardens, but also at American history and the hybrid world-part nature, part design-in which we live.” — Charles Donelan, Santa Barbara Independent
Mr. Graham recounts his tale with considerable verve and a vast erudition in the history of gardening and the arts generally…. Among much else, Mr. Graham shows us that the history of how our nation grew can be found in what it has grown.
The most comprehensive and readable history ever written about the men and women who created the environments in which we now live…. will change the way you look not only at gardens, but also at American history and the hybrid world-part nature, part design-in which we live.
A shrewd, comprehensive and often entertaining guide…. Sure to be a scholarly as well as popular resource for years to come…. And its illustrations and photos tour of some of the world’s most ravishing gardens.
We are what we plant, L.A.-based writer Wade Graham posits in his history of gardens. When he isn’t explaining the economic and cultural influences, he crafts fascinating profiles…. An engaging look at our own pieces of paradise.
Europeans weren't the first gardeners in the New World. Early 17th century colonial settlers found that Native Americans were already planting small plots near their homes. By the following century, however, New England and Virginia colonists had far outstripped such rudimentary efforts. Wade Graham's American Eden displays the continuing development of gardening in our country from their experimental tracts to those of Martha Stewart, Michelle Obama, and backyard naturalists. Copiously illustrated, this 440-page history places this private passion within the contexts of its times.
From Jefferson's founding garden, Monticello, to Martha Stewart's Turkey Hill, American gardens have been revealing self-portraits that reflect their owners aspirations and anxieties, cultural legacies and passing fashions. In his far-ranging survey, designer and historian Graham unveils the aesthetic, political, psychological, and ethical dimensions of the American garden. This is a world in which hedges, lawns, parks, and cemeteries are revealing displays of national identity, class distinction, and political correctness. Our gardens are a pastiche of classical pastoral ideals, the 19th-century European grand tour, and the distinctly American tension between our democratic ideals and aristocratic pretensions. Graham is able to gently mock the fashions of history while astutely observing that we are still as vulnerable to gardening fads today. After more than 250 years, the American gardening tradition has bequeathed to us treasured public parks, suburban sprawl, Kentucky bluegrass lawns in the desert, and kitchen gardens at the White House. Graham's history is a fascinating and illuminating tour of this American landscape. Includes extensive notes and bibliography. More than 70 color and b&w illus. (Apr.)
Scrupulous history of American gardens and the imaginative creators who made them possible.
Los Angeles–based garden designer and environmental writer Graham shares a wealth of knowledge on the genesis and development of America's most striking landscapes. Each a "miniature Utopia," these leafy environs are a reflection of their respective architects. The author ardently describes the first garden creations of the 1600s, then moves on to the Arts & Crafts romantic naturalism movement in the mid-19th century and Martha Stewart's unique brand of house-and-garden style, which is interwoven with business savvy and "controlled enthusiasm." Graham's visit to the panoramic "founding garden" of Thomas Jefferson's Monticello, derived from British poet Alexander Pope's "cutting-edge" landscaping approach, provides an intimate history of the third president's life and boundless passion as a dedicated architecture and flora aficionado. The planned landscaping influence of "aesthetic giant" Andrew Jackson Downing paved the way for the blossoming genius of Frederick Law Olmsted, who, in collaboration with architect Calvert Vaux, brought "country to the city" in the redesign of New York's Prospect Park and Central Park and Boston's Emerald Necklace, among others. Graham points to the greening of New York's Chelsea and West Village neighborhoods, the installation of Manhattan's unique aerial greenway, High Line Park, and Michelle Obama's White House kitchen garden as examples of a modern "return to agriculture" movement. Accented by paintings, photographs and drawings, the author's appealing commentary introduces a distinctive line of gardeners and foliage engineers whose work has become timeless.
A bright, comprehensive horticultural celebration written with a fine eye for detail.