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For Rebecca Bushnell, English gardening books tell a fascinating
tale of the human love for plants and our will to make them do as
we wish. These books powerfully evoke the desires of gardeners:
they show us gardeners who, like poets, imagine not just what is
but what should be. In particular, the earliest English garden
books, such as Thomas Hill's The Gardeners Labyrinth or Hugh
Platt's Floraes Paradise, mix magical practices with mundane
recipes even when the authors insist that they rely completely on
their own experience in these matters. Like early modern "books of
secrets," early gardening manuals often promise the reader power to
alter the essential properties of plants: to make the gillyflower
double, to change the lily's hue, or to grow a cherry without a
stone. Green Desire describes the innovative design of the old
manuals, examining how writers and printers marketed them as
fiction as well as practical advice for aspiring gardeners. Along
with this attention to the delights of reading, it analyzes the
strange dignity and pleasure of garden labor and the division of
men's and women's roles in creating garden art. The book ends by
recounting the heated debate over how much people could do to
create marvels in their own gardens. For writers and readers alike,
these green desires inspired dreams of power and self-improvement,
fantasies of beauty achieved without work, and hopes for order in
an unpredictable world not so different from the dreams of
gardeners today."
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