The Garden Against Time
In Search Of A Common Paradise
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Description
From one of our most original contemporary voices,
The Garden Against Time
is an inventive and deeply felt exploration of the long dream of a shared Eden, a common paradise.
Laing belongs in an as-yet-undefined and perhaps undefinable class of prose artists who blend feeling and analysis, speculation and research, wit and instruction as they track down the elusive patterns and inescapable contradictions of modern experience
Buzzing and epic . . . like all Laing’s works, this one is a joyful expansion on the meaning of the subject it undertakes . . . The history of gardens and gardening is a fascinating subject, but
The Garden Against Time
asks for more. Laing seeks a communal space where we can cherish what is most beautiful about being alive. The possiblities are what matter
What a wonderful book this is. I loved the enchanting and beautifully written story but also the fascinating and thoughtful excursions along the way
A sharp and enthralling memoir of the garden’s contradiction: dream and reality, life and death, the fascination of cultivation and the political horrors that it can disguise
Laing probes important questions about land ownership and exclusion and the human drive to create paradise on earth. All the while, her elegant prose bewitches and beguiles. A truly wonderful read
No one writes with more energy and ecstasy than Olivia Laing. This book is what we need right now: paradise, regained
This book is as imaginatively structured and full of beauties and surprises as the garden whose creation it documents
Every generation gets one perfect book about gardens and this is ours
Olivia Laing is a marvellous writer. So prepare yourself to be enchanted
The most magical writing, intimate, insightful, learned and brilliant
An extraordinary and important work. I felt doubly alive after reading it. The book is an inspiration.
It takes its rightful place in the constellation that includes Jamaica Kincaid, Russell Page, Derek Jarman, and Jenny Uglow
A magisterial work, and the exacting sensuality of her garden writing is pure pleasure, delight, surprise. It is a triumph, from a writer at the height of her powers
Quite literally unputdownable. It is astonishing, funny, beautiful, wise, charming and truthful
A sensational work, somehow encompassing so many diverse preoccupations with a confidence and control that kept me spellbound
Olivia Laing has written a book about making her garden, which is by turns lyrical, consoling, disturbing and inspiring. It’s a book for thinking gardeners everywhere
Powerful, reflective and captivating to read - I loved it.
A vital read in the age of climate crisis
I don’t think I’ve ever read a book that captures so well not only the deep pleasures and satisfactions of gardening, but its near-hypnotic effect on the human body and mind
Could I live this way: thoughtfully, keeping in mind the fortunes of others? Twee as it sounds, if we all did, could we make the world a better place? How exquisite to hold a book that makes me believe so
The Garden Against Time
, despite its darker subtexts, feels like a recuperative work
[Laing] excelled at looking at art in
The Lonely City
(2016) her meditation on urban isolation in the lives and works of American painters, and she brings the same quality of attention to her new book, writing about her garden with a vigour that should carry even the least green-fingered reader . . . a wise and enthralling book
A beautiful book that explores the garden as a political site – of sanctified and at times selfish seclusion in an unequal world
There is much to relish in this abundant book
Gorgeous, enchantingly constructed non-fiction about the power and beauty of gardens
Laing writes with joy and spirit.
In her
soaring new memoir,
The Garden Against Time
, [Laing] wrestles with the political significance of the garden and asks fundamental questions about humans’ relationship to the land and to each other. The result is
a book not only lyrical but informative and quietly profound
. . . Laing loves the beauty of gardens, and the toil of working within them.
Sharing her unashamed passion is a pleasure and a privilege.
Enchanting . . . What makes this captivating book more than an elaborate journal of gardening and its fraught history is Laing’s insistence on Jarman’s idea that “paradise haunts gardens"
Olivia Laing is a widely acclaimed writer and critic. They are the author of several books, including
The Lonely City, Everybody
and
Funny Weather
. Their first novel,
Crudo
, was a
Sunday Times
top ten bestseller and won the James Tait Memorial Prize. They they were awarded a Windham-Campbell Prize for non-fiction.
The Garden Against Time
was a No.1
Sunday Times
bestseller.