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You Should Have Been Here Last Week: Sharp Cuttings from a Garden Writer [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius: 198x135 mm, 50,000 words
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Oct-2016
  • Kirjastus: Pimpernel Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1910258350
  • ISBN-13: 9781910258354
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 208 pages, kõrgus x laius: 198x135 mm, 50,000 words
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Oct-2016
  • Kirjastus: Pimpernel Press Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1910258350
  • ISBN-13: 9781910258354
Teised raamatud teemal:
An amusing and thought-provoking compendium of columns, articles, essays and reviews from this acute, knowledgeable and irreverent commentator.





In a career that has ranged from Country Life to Wallpaper* spanning the full range between the two, and latterly including the Daily Telegraph and the New York Times Tim Richardson has gone, both intellectually and geographically, where few other garden writers dare to tread. There are no articles here about the best ways to grow sweet peas or potatoes: Tim is more likely to venture into the realms of art, philosophy or politics. 





This collection contains articles which have influenced the way we think about gardens as well as one or two which proved too hot to handle and resulted in his being fired as a columnist.





 





 

Arvustused

"Delightful...a great read for anyone who likes to challenge the status quo, enjoys gardening or visiting gardens and has ever wished they could stick a literary two fingers up!" * A Pentland Garden Diary * "His topics (targets?) are many and varied always spot-on, erudite and beautifully written. I could tempt you with a hundred nuggets but I won't, because every HORTUS reader should leave his armchair right now and go out to buy a copy - preferably from an independent bookseller. You will not be disappointed." -- David Wheeler * Hortus * "The perfect book for the Christmas stocking   small, compact and a little treasure. It is a collection of Tim Richardsons columns, articles, essays and reviews and they are, first and foremost, entertaining but also informative and thought provoking. Tim Richardons style is witty, insightful, provocative and, above all, enjoyable and fun to read. I loved it! Loved it!"





  * Irish Garden Plant Society blog * "Wide-ranging..Lots of food for thought" * The Irish Garden (Pick of the Month) * If you want a book to dip into, there is always something interesting to find.  And if you want to be amused, exasperated or challenged, then read the lot.  The most important thing is that on every page, Richardson takes gardens and gardening seriously.





  * Thinkin Gardens * "Here is a collection of articles, essays, reviews and columns written for various publications between 2004 and 2015, on a huge variety of subjects. Some are amusing, some thought-provoking and some are downright contentious. All are worth reading. Tim Richardson is a practiced writer and reviewer of gardens, styles of gardening, designers, and gardeners both living and historic whether you agree with his views or not, theres no denying he expresses himself clearly and persuasively." * The Professional Gardener * A hugely entertaining read with pieces that provide just the right amount of venom * Gardens Illustrated * "The most independent, thoughtful, challenging gardening critic writing now. Every article here makes entertaining reading as well as being well worth pondering." -- David Sexton * Evening Standard Best Gardening Books of 2016 * "Incisive, witty, opinionated and thought-provoking, its subject matter is engagingly eclectic."





  -- Fionnuala Fallon * Irish Times * "There is lots of meat (or maybe high quality protein, if you prefer) in these short pieces plenty to think about, discuss, and to challenge your thinking about gardening. And he is a good writer rich in quotable passages, sometimes cutting, controversial even. It is worth buying, this book and it is not even expensive. I wish there was more garden writing of this quality." * Tikorangi Garden blog, New Zealand * "A collection of short pieces by the marvellously opinionated, self-assured author and historian Tim Richardson...genuinely stimulating." -- Jane Powers * Sunday Times Ireland * "Informed criticism of what contemporary designers are up to is hard to find, but you can depend on Tim Richardson - the best, indeed almost the only, garden polemicist we've got." -- Ursula Buchan * Spectator *  "A collection of lively articles by one of the most intelligent garden critics writing today. Richardson is not afraid to prod, tease and question received opinion." -- Caroline Donald * Sunday Times * "Witty and full of perceptive comment." * Times Literary Supplement * "Tim Richardson is our most critically intelligent, observant and humorous garden historian." -- David Sexton "Noone writes better than the English gardening scene than Tim Richardson. He has a formidable range of reference and a brilliant way with words." -- Anna Pavord

Introduction i
Trentham
1(1)
New Perennials
2(2)
Sissinghurst
4(1)
Existentialist gardening
5(2)
Small gardens
7(1)
Dreadful
8(2)
Garden ornament
10(2)
Horticultural monomania
12(1)
Plants and architecture
13(2)
Personal questions
15(1)
Love of plants
16(2)
My week
18(2)
Tom Stuart-Smith
20(3)
Mikinori Ogisu
23(3)
Sissinghurst again
26(3)
Three cheers for colour
29(2)
Duisburg Nord
31(4)
American alligators
35(3)
Villa Gamberaia
38(3)
Down with design
41(2)
Ian Hamilton Finlay
43(5)
Music and gardens
48(2)
Great Dixter
50(3)
The Sheffield School
53(2)
What a way to go
55(2)
RHS judging
57(1)
Gardening clothes
58(2)
The politics of self-sufficiency
60(6)
Serre de la Madone
66(2)
Ghosts
68(3)
Landform
71(5)
Chanticleer meets Great Dixter
76(2)
`Real' gardening?
78(2)
Robin Lane Fox in Oxford
80(2)
Immersive not pictorial
82(2)
Rosemary Verey
84(4)
Lost heroes of gardening
88(2)
Cycling to gardens
90(2)
Super-shacks
92(3)
Natural playspace
95(2)
Fifth season
97(2)
Gay gardening
99(2)
The Chelsea Fringe
101(2)
Tree planting
103(6)
Yellow Book
109(2)
Rodmarton
111(3)
Suburban modernism
114(2)
Bekonscot model village
116(2)
The resonant ash
118(3)
Korea
121(4)
Night gardens
125(2)
Jellicoe at Runnymede
127(3)
Museum Without Walls
130(3)
A Career In Garden Design?
133(2)
Piet Oudolf in Somerset
135(4)
Shrubs make a comeback
139(5)
Haunted garden
144(4)
Alice
148(2)
A Little Chaos
150(2)
On islands
152(2)
Long Barn
154(3)
Chelsea Flower Show
157(3)
From Versailles to Poplar
160(3)
The education of a gardener
163(4)
Re-Vita-lizing Sissinghurst
167(3)
Connie
170(5)
`Capability' Brown
175(3)
Where is the British art?
178(4)
Is your garden good for you?
182(3)
Index 185(3)
Acknowledgments 188
Tim Richardson is a garden historian, journalist and critic. His books include The New English Garden (2013), The Arcadian Friends: Inventing the English Landscape Garden (2007), Great Gardens of America (2009), and Oxford College Gardens (2015). He writes regularly for newspapers and magazines including the Daily Telegraph, the New York Times and Gardens Illustrated. He is also the author of Oxford Universitys course on the history of the English landscape garden, and advises the National Trust on landscape conservation. In 201415 he was visiting professor in landscape art at Vienna University of Arts. He is the founder-director of the Chelsea Fringe, the alternative gardens festival.