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Tiny Gardens Everywhere: A History of Urban Resilience [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 241x164x32 mm, kaal: 526 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: The Bodley Head Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1847929257
  • ISBN-13: 9781847929259
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 241x164x32 mm, kaal: 526 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: The Bodley Head Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1847929257
  • ISBN-13: 9781847929259
A big history of little spaces, of nature in urban life, and of gardeners and their gardens through time

What a wonder this book is! Absolutely riveting and beautifully written. I hope we can all heed its wisdom ISABELLA TREE 'Splendid' Mail on Sunday 'Engaging and inspiring. A fascinating history into the quietly radical role of allotments' CHRIS FITCH

In the heart of bustling European and American cities lies an overlooked yet vibrant corner of resilience, ingenuity and magic: our gardens.

From pre-industrial England to modern-day Ohio, via the Paris Commune, Barackia in pre-war Berlin, Soviet allotments in Estonia, the orchards tended by Black migrants in Washington and food forests in contemporary Amsterdam, ordinary people, working with each other and with nature, cultivated life in the unlikeliest of places. Over the past three hundred years, these tiny gardens, often born from necessity and shaped by precarity, immigration and environmental crisis, have thrived by recycling nutrients, remedying contaminated soil and transforming how we think about our relationship to the earth.

Tiny Gardens Everywhere is a hymn to the most fertile agriculture in recorded human history, showing that it occurred not on farms the product of gigantic exertions of fossil fuels and technology but with little effort in small garden beds. And the resourcefulness, intuition and inherited methods of their growers accomplished many of todays sustainability goals by producing local, diverse and organic food.

Acclaimed historian Kate Brown unearths the long and battered story of gardeners and their gardens, asking what happens when these urban Edens are not seen as retreats from the city but become part of its social fabric, alive with histories of displacement, conflict and resistance. This is a book about land, but also about community, repair and the quiet revolutions that begin when someone plants a seed in unloved ground.

Arvustused

This manifesto of urban gardening explores how planted parcels of land can not only provide nutrition but also support social revolution ... Throughout, Brown proves that gardening is not just a way to produce food but also a tool of self-empowerment. * New Yorker * This timely book ... looks at the ingenious ways that city dwellers have carved out space for cultivating their own fruit and vegetables and why growing conditions in the city may actually be healthier than the countryside splendid ... Tiny Gardens Everywhere makes a powerful case for more urban gardeners to be encouraged to grow their own produce Could this be the time for town gardeners to dig for victory once again? -- Constance Craig Smith * Mail on Sunday * She deftly combines ... pressing ecological concerns with an absorbing narrative history -- Timothy Mowl * Country Life * What a wonder Tiny Gardens Everywhere is! This absolutely riveting, beautifully written book is a blueprint for how we can transform our cities by remembering the lessons of the past - how by simply providing space for gardens we can create happier, healthier communities, grow prolific, sustainable food and construct cities that are connected with the earth and a fairer way of living. How I hope we can all heed the wisdom of this astonishing book! -- Isabella Tree * author of WILDING * It is hard to imagine a city could double up not only as a system of food production, but a place where people can feel intimately connected to the land and yet it is a story which Tiny Gardens Everywhere shows can be found across the world ... the multitude of examples in the book show that a garden is an act of communion with other species too, turning cities into multi-species ventures, instead of grey, concrete, lonely spaces. All that aside, the potential tiny gardens hold for transforming our mental health, and thus our ability to be in community, is perhaps the most pressing argument of all. -- Tallulah Brennan * Caught by the River * With enviable skill, craft, and insight, Kate Brown shows that the past of small-scale urban provisioning contains the seeds of a more resilient future for us all. -- Sunil Amrith * author of THE BURNING EARTH * Tiny Gardens Everywhere shows us the path between the plot and the planet. Its an amazing, beautiful book; I couldnt put it down. -- Anna Tsing * author of THE MUSHROOM AT THE END OF THE WORLD * Engaging and inspiring. A fascinating history into the quietly radical role of allotments and guerrilla gardening. A reminder that cities are still places where plants can thrive, where people can connect to the earth, despite all the concrete, brick and asphalt. Superb. -- Chris Fitch * author of WILD CITIES * 'A heartening testimony to the efficacy of small, idiosyncratic projects, and the ingenuity and resilience of urban gardeners -- Todd Longstaffe-Gowan * landscape architect & author of LOST GARDENS OF LONDON * A sparkling new history of urban areas demonstrating that they have long been full of vibrant green shoots. Diving into this visionary blend of history, memoir, and political insight is like eating a salad of fresh spring greens with a sprinkling of wild strawberries refreshing, delightful, and nourishing for both mind and spirit. -- Tiya Miles * author of WILD GIRLS and ALL THAT SHE CARRIED * For urban farmers world-wide, this vibrant secret history validates our work and guides future gardeners toward better composting, radical use of common spaces, and plenty of zucchini. -- Novella Carpenter * author of FARM CITY and THE ESSENTIAL URBAN FARMER *

Kate Brown is a Distinguished Professor in the History of Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author of four previous prize-wining books, including A Biography of No Place, which won the George Louis Beer Prize from the American Historical Association, Plutopia, which won the Dunning and Beveridge prizes from the American Historical Association and Manual for Survival, which was a finalist for the 2020 NBCC Award. She currently plants her gardens in Cambridge, Massachusetts and in Vermont.