cover image On Guerrilla Gardening: A Handbook for Gardening Without Boundaries

On Guerrilla Gardening: A Handbook for Gardening Without Boundaries

Richard Reynolds. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, $25.99 (255pp) ISBN 978-1-59691-449-0

With the rallying cry, ""Let's fight the filth with forks and flowers,"" this lighthearted guide is a seriously silly romp through the adventurous pastime of gardening other people's plots. Reynolds, after five months living in a 10-story tower block in London, missed gardening and began surreptitiously cultivating the planters in front of his building, gardening in the dead of night to avoid interference. He started a blog to share his delight in illicit gardening, and discovered he was part of an international movement. Reynolds draws inspiration from pioneers of the movement: New York community gardens built on vacant lots, dispossessed Honduran Chiquita workers who appropriated abandoned banana plantation land, and Gerrard Winstanley, founder of the short-lived but influential Diggers who, in the tumultuous year of 1649, planted beans and barley on public land in Surry, England, ""that every one that is born in the land, may be fed by the Earth his Mother that brought him forth, according to the Reason that rules in the Creation."" He borrows techniques from more infamous guerrillas such as Che Guevera and Mao Tse Tung (""the guerrilla 'must move with the fluidity of water and the ease of the blowing wind'""). Both a manifesto and a manual (tips include how to build seed bombs and deal with pests unique to the guerrilla form of gardening: authorities and landowners), the book delights with tales of exploits from the anarchic, artistic community of guerrilla gardeners.