(10/12/2014)
"Backyard" could very well be heaven for devoted gardeners, with delightful, knowledgeable descriptions of all kinds of flowers and weeds, as well as the designs of various backyard gardens, and those who eat, sleep, drink, and breathe those gardens.
However, the delight only goes so far, such as a description of the garden of George and Nan Fremont, admired by many fellow gardeners and reviled by the imperious, holier-gardening-than-thou Dr. Sproot. A wonderful name, but a one-note character. And even though he purports to show us how elaborate the Fremonts' garden is, the pages and pages given over to it becomes exhausting.
The whole novel centers around a gardening contest sponsored by Burdick's Plant World, but it's hard to get into it, wearying to watch as these characters go to great lengths to try to win in the town of Livia in the upper Midwest. It feels like we're running around and around the same track, hoping for something different to pop up in the telling, soon realizing it's a futile hope. As a story, it lacks a great deal of forward motion, something worth following, even while the contest goes on. For gardeners, and this reader who loves to read about flowers rather than plant them, it's a lot of fun seeing such deep knowledge bursting through these pages, that you half-expect to smell each flower as Norman Draper describes it. Hopefully the story will shine through in the sequel alongside the flowers.