cover image Life in the Garden

Life in the Garden

Penelope Lively. Viking, $25 (199) ISBN 978-0-52555-837-8

In this charming memoir, Booker Prize–winner Lively muses languidly on her life and how it has been influenced by gardens literal and imaginary. Exploring gardens in literature, Lively quotes Virginia Woolf: “The first pure joy of the garden... weeding all day to finish the beds in a queer sort of enthusiasm which made me say this is happiness.” In “The Written Garden,” Lively delights in how Elizabeth Bowen in The Little Girls “plunges the reader into a garden with ‘steamy flower-smells.’ ” Lively’s history of gardening tracks its evolution from being something enjoyed by English Victorian aristocrats through to modern middle-class window boxes in urban London, and she realizes that people’s aesthetic and communal values are reflected in how they manipulate nature: “And to garden is to impose order... the harnessing of nature to a purpose, initially practical, and later aesthetic.” Lively’s astute observations of one’s relations with nature becomes a study of how people view themselves: “We garden differently according to who we are... By their windows ye shall know them.” She clearly knows her gardening, and her exuberance on the subject will make novice gardeners long to be a part of her club. For garden enthusiasts and lovers of Romantic British literature, Lively’s narrative is like an intimate conversation with an erudite fellow gardener. (June)