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Summary and Reviews of The Garden Against Time by Olivia Laing

The Garden Against Time by Olivia Laing

The Garden Against Time

In Search of a Common Paradise

by Olivia Laing
  • BookBrowse Review:
  • Critics' Consensus (7):
  • First Published:
  • Jun 25, 2024, 336 pages
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About This Book

Book Summary

Inspired by the restoration of her own garden, "imaginative and empathetic critic" (NPR) Olivia Laing embarks on an exhilarating investigation of paradise.

In 2020, Olivia Laing began to restore an 18th century walled garden in Suffolk, an overgrown Eden of unusual plants. The work brought to light a crucial question for our age: Who gets to live in paradise, and how can we share it while there's still time? Moving between real and imagined gardens, from Milton's Paradise Lost to John Clare's enclosure elegies, from a wartime sanctuary in Italy to a grotesque aristocratic pleasure ground funded by slavery, Laing interrogates the sometimes shocking cost of making paradise on earth.

But the story of the garden doesn't always enact larger patterns of privilege and exclusion. It's also a place of rebel outposts and communal dreams. From the improbable queer utopia conjured by Derek Jarman on the beach at Dungeness to the fertile vision of a common Eden propagated by William Morris, new modes of living can and have been attempted amidst the flower beds, experiments that could prove vital in the coming era of climate change. The result is a humming, glowing tapestry, a beautiful and exacting account of the abundant pleasures and possibilities of gardens: not as a place to hide from the world but as a site of encounter and discovery, bee-loud and pollen-laden.

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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

Gardening is as much an intellectual endeavor for Laing as it is a physical one, and the roots of her thinking run deep. She makes room in this expansive book for figures ranging from the Greek historian and philosopher Xenophon to Toni Morrison, but the greatest space is given over to micro-biographies of those who, like herself, have sought to plant paradise. Between vignettes from her own struggles, Laing introduces figures like John Clare, the 19th-century "peasant poet" who captured the natural world in verse; Iris Origo, the heiress whose Italian estate turned refugee camp in the Second World War; and Capability Brown, the landscape architect whose vision of rolling hills and untouched valleys reshaped the English countryside. All these disparate parts undoubtedly give the The Garden Against Time a loose feel, but Laing is skillful enough to gather her anecdotes into satisfying bouquets. Indeed, her taste in prose certainly matches her taste in flora; the writing is overabundant and knotty, but always hovering on the right side of unmanageable...continued

Full Review Members Only (822 words)

(Reviewed by Alex Russell).

Media Reviews

New York Times
This isn't a historical survey of gardening, much less a practical guide, so much as an inquiry into the idea of the garden — its history and poetics, its relationship to sex, imagination and power. 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.

The Millions
Olivia Laing's The Garden Against Time is a close and vagrant meditation on the tended plot as real and metaphoric paradise, a potentially radical place to overwinter and come back out to hope.

Washington Post
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.

Financial Times (UK)
[The Garden Against Time is a] celebration by the acclaimed writer and critic of the abundant pleasures and possibilities of gardens―not as a place to hide from the world but as a site of experiment and discovery―that ranges from pandemic Suffolk to utopian visions of a new Eden, while also examining the sometimes shocking costs of making paradise on Earth.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
An intellectually verdant and emotionally rich narrative journey.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
[Laing's] lyrical prose emphasizes the ways in which gardens connect individuals across history…leading the author to muse that her attraction to cultivating plants stems from wanting "to move into a different understanding of time: the kind of time that moves in spirals or cycles, pulsing between rot and fertility, light and darkness." This is well worth seeking out.

Author Blurb Neel Mukherjee, author of The Lives of Others
A book that begins as beguiling and beautiful then flicks into the revelatory: the work of salvaging a ruined garden in Suffolk becomes a book about a different kind of salvation altogether. Her mind is so agile, so capacious, so widely ranging, so consistently surprising. If I had the means, I'd present her with large plots of land every year so that she could write books such as this again and again.

Author Blurb Sarah Schulman, author of Let the Record Show
A cumulative intellectual with a golden pen, Laing… connects collectivity with dirt, hand-building both private and generous new worlds as safe refuge and risky experiments.

Author Blurb Sue Stuart-Smith, author of The Well-Gardened Mind
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.

Reader Reviews

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Beyond the Book



Capability Brown and the English Garden

Color photograph of the Old English Garden at Dandon Park in London, showing an expanse of green lawn, flower beds and shrubs, and a mansion in the background In The Garden Against Time, Olivia Laing traces the evolution of gardens and the different meanings they have taken on in society. One major European development she addresses is the work of Capability Brown and the advent, in the mid-18th century, of a style that came to be known simply as the English garden.

Lancelot "Capability" Brown was born in 1716. The son of a land agent and a chambermaid, he started his career as an under-gardener at Stowe House, a stately home not far from Oxford, before quickly climbing the ranks to become head gardener of the estate in his mid-20s. By this time, a certain aesthetic ideal was starting to bloom in the gardens of England's aristocracy. Every earl and baron in the country dreamed of ...

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Read-Alikes

Read-Alikes Full readalike results are for members only

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    The Costa Award-winning author of The Pike makes her literary fiction debut with an extraordinary historical novel in the spirit of Wolf Hall and Atonement - a great English country house novel, spanning three centuries, that explores surprisingly timely themes of immigration and exclusion.

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    The Garden of Evening Mists

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    Malaya, 1951. Yun Ling Teoh, the scarred lone survivor of a brutal Japanese wartime camp, seeks solace among the jungle-fringed tea plantations of Cameron Highlands. There she discovers Yugiri, the only Japanese garden in Malaya, and its owner and creator, the enigmatic Aritomo, exiled former gardener of the emperor of Japan.

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